![A photo-illustration of an open Bible on a lectern facing a sign-holding crowd at a Trump rally](https://cdn.statically.io/img/cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/XUt2eIcvhJzXNEEnFSIrqS79tFg=/37x674:2002x1984/624x416/media/img/2024/07/DIS_Coppins_PrayerFinal/original.png)
The Most Revealing Moment of a Trump Rally
A close reading of the prayers delivered before the former president speaks
A close reading of the prayers delivered before the former president speaks
I was a child in the 1960s, and those days weren’t better—but in one way, they were sweeter.
The Park Fire is already one of the 10 largest recorded in the state’s history.
The officer who killed Sonya Massey didn’t see what I see.
Perfectionists find themselves trying to be the best, even at things for which the concept is inapplicable.
Voters say they don’t know what Kamala Harris stands for. That’s a challenge—and an opportunity.
My dad came here for a reason, and it wasn’t the dirt of a graveyard.
A unique view of a whimsical obstacle for riders in Versailles
The staff of The Atlantic on the threat a second term poses to American democracy
How an American team of retreads, castoffs, and one software engineer took down a dominant world power
“But the lesson of all this was not lost on Nixon: the newspapers had threatened his political career; television had saved it.” (From 1973)
Images of the many events, athletes, and spectators at the 1924 Summer Olympics in Paris
Gambling makes money for sports. But what does it cost athletes and fans?
Arthur Brooks on faith and the loneliness epidemic