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Democracy Needs India

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
When the G7 group of rich democracies assemble this weekend in southwest England, they will discuss issues including COVID-19, taxes, and climate change ... India. Democracy’s fate there may determine its fate throughout the world. At the moment, the signs aren’t looking good—and that should be a flashing-red warning beacon for the rest of us ... [ Read ... .
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Can Bollywood Survive Modi?

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
India's Hindu-nationalist prime minister, Narendra Modi ( upper right ), and three of Bollywood's biggest Muslim stars ( left to right ) ... T he Bandra-Worli Sea Link connects central Mumbai with neighborhoods to the north ... Actors, makeup artists, special-effects people—they cluster in a handful of seaside neighborhoods ... [ From the May 2020 issue ... At No.
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The Curse of Revenge Bedtime Procrastination

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
“ How to Build a Life ” is a weekly column by Arthur Brooks, tackling questions of meaning and happiness. F or many people, the cruelest part of daily life is the transition between wakefulness and sleep. When you should be sleeping, you want to be awake; when you should be awake, you want to stay asleep. It is easy to regard sleep as a torment ... 1 ... 2 ... .
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The Lab-Leak Trap

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
After months of getting very little coverage, the lab-leak theory for the origins of COVID-19—which holds that the virus emerged from a research setting—is now a source of endless chatter ... A careful look at all the ways that the pandemic might have started matters for the future ... To focus better on what really matters, watch out for these traps ... .
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A Pivotal Mosquito Experiment Could Not Have Gone Better

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
Adi Utarini had her first of two bouts of dengue fever in 1986, when she was still a medical student. Within a few hours, she spiked a temperature of 104 degrees Fahrenheit and couldn’t stand up, because her knee was shaking so badly. Within a few days, she was in the hospital. That experience is common in Utarini’s home city of Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
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The Other Border Crisis

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
I f you ask Roger Dow, what’s happening at the border is “monstrous”—a prolonged disaster that gets worse by the day. “It is a crisis,” he told me by phone last week. Dow is the CEO of the U.S ... Dow was talking about the 5,500-mile northern divide between the United States and Canada—and the “crisis” there is that hardly anyone can get across at all ... .
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The IVF Cases That Broke Birthright Citizenship

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
Ethan and Aiden Dvash-Banks are twin brothers—born just four minutes apart on the same September day in the same hospital room in Ontario, Canada. But shortly after their birth in 2016, the U.S. State Department decided that the two boys were very different in the eyes of American law. Aiden was a U.S ... American officials didn’t see it that way, though.
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It Wasn’t Just Another Nightclub

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
E very December, when Christmas rolls around, I hear Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You” and I think of the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, five years ago in the middle of June—literally as far from Christmas as you can get. I had volunteered to fly to Florida to cover the massacre for NPR ... on the outside, looking in ... He said yes.
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The World’s Greatest Athlete Can Do What She Wants

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
Simone Biles is the greatest athlete in the world today. For me, this isn’t a debate. It’s a statement of fact. On Sunday, she won a record seventh United States gymnastics championship , continuing her jaw-dropping winning streak in every all-around competition she’s entered since 2013. The 24-year-old hasn’t lost in eight years ... [ Read ... team ... .
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The Atlantic Daily: Vaccinated America Is Distracted by Its New Freedoms

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
Every weekday evening, our editors guide you through the biggest stories of the day, help you discover new ideas, and surprise you with moments of delight. Subscribe to get this delivered to your inbox. Things look pretty good in America—so good, its residents might be tempted to talk about the pandemic in the past tense ... One question, answered ... .
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The Emotional Center of In the Heights

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
This article contains spoilers for In the Heights. In The Heights , the director Jon M. Chu’s Hollywood adaptation of the groundbreaking Broadway musical, is ostensibly a tale about the aspirational young. Its focus stays mostly on some dreamers (and a “Dreamer”) living in the Upper Manhattan neighborhood of Washington Heights ... [ Read ... [ Read ... .
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We Choose Our Cults Every Day

The Atlantic 10 Jun 2021
Way back in January, I was idly thumbing through Instagram when I received a message that shook me like a nascent martini. “Did you hear that Taking Cara Babies donated to Trump ?” a friend wrote. This sentence likely makes no sense to you, unless you’ve had a baby sometime in the past few years ... And it worked ... [ Read ... [ Read ... .
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Immune Cells Are More Paranoid Than We Thought

The Atlantic 09 Jun 2021
The best immune systems thrive on a healthy dose of paranoia ... This system is built on alarmism, but it very often pays off. Most of our encounters with pathogens end before we ever notice them. The agents of immunity are so risk-averse that even the dread of facing off with a pathogen can sometimes prompt them to gird their little loins ... .
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Joe Biden Needs to Show Democracy Can Deliver

The Atlantic 09 Jun 2021
A few months into Joe Biden’s presidency, it certainly seems like foreign policy has taken a back seat to domestic policy. The president’s top priorities are clearly tackling the pandemic and multitrillion-dollar infrastructure and economic-stimulus plans. However, this should not obscure a significant shift in U.S ... Biden’s top Asia adviser, Kurt M ... W.
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Commuting Was the Worst. So Why Do We Miss It?

The Atlantic 09 Jun 2021
This article was published online on June 9, 2021. B ack when commuting was a requirement for going to work, I once passed through a subway tunnel so filthy and crowded that the poem inscribed on its ceiling seemed like a cruel joke. “ Overslept, / so tired. / If late, / get fired ... But no one questioned the gist of it ... But here’s the strange part ... P.
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