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Today:
What the Prairieland Prosecutions Reveal About Trump’s America

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Last July, a group of activists staged what they called a “noise demonstration” at ICE’s Prairieland Detention Facility, near Dallas. But the name is contentious: President Trump has labeled antifa a “domestic terrorism group” even though no such legal designation exists. Nine people were tried in connection with the incident, and prosecutors leaned into the antifa framing during the trial. Some of the Prairieland charges are ones that any administration in American history would have brought, and rightly so. One of the judges in the Prairieland case, Reed O’Connor, said in court that the sentences fit the crime: “The defendants’ violence and terrorism is an assault on democracy.

Top Stories:
The True Believers at the Great MAGA Fair

NEWS | 26 June 2026
For one night, in the heart of deep-blue Washington, D.C., a fenced-off section of the National Mall became an oasis for members of the MAGA base. They live full-time in Wilmington, North Carolina, and they made the six-and-a-half-hour trip up to D.C. for the Great American State Fair—and the rally especially. “They love this country.”The Trump rallies they’d previously attended—Karen’s been to two, Paul to three—had been a blast, they said. “I think he’s earned our trust,” Paul told me. “Is President Trump my favorite person in the world?” Ervin said.

World:
One Metaphor to End Them All

NEWS | 26 June 2026
The Reflecting Pool is a metaphor so perfect, it feels almost valedictory, as though symbolism as a whole gave up and decided to sign off. The Reflecting Pool is not that kind of metaphor. But usually, when the Trump administration supplies us with such an obvious, on-the-nose metaphor, there are people trapped inside it. That’s the seductiveness of the Reflecting Pool. Maybe not being that deep is what makes the pool so good a metaphor.

Current Events:
Authoritarians Are Great at Propaganda—Until They’re Not

NEWS | 26 June 2026
This is an edition of Time-Travel Thursdays, a journey through The Atlantic’s archives to contextualize the present. Still, Trump’s influence over American art and museums has its limits. Artists have canceled shows at the Smithsonian and elsewhere, and some exhibits are sidestepping the president’s war on DEI. Meanwhile, the administration’s threats linger, mostly in the form of withholding funding from museums and artists that do not obey its vision. But the Trump era is the latest test of just how much it can endure, and how it might evolve in response.

News Flash:
The Strange, Explicable Appeal of Train Dog

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Train Dog chugs. Train Dog pants. “I love you train dog,” the technology reporter Mike Isaac wrote on X, and his enthusiasm is widely shared. That little “toot toot” takes the oldest story in the world—man versus nature—and tells it as a tale of absurdist symbiosis. The train component of Train Dog, you might notice, is not any old rail car but a notably old-timey specimen (barrel-shaped, matte black, spewing exhaust with 19th-century breeze).

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Remote Monitoring App

SPONSORED | 26 June 2026
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Latest:
The Truth About Steven Spielberg’s Alien Obsession

NEWS | 26 June 2026
This article contains spoilers for the film Disclosure Day. As much as Steven Spielberg likes aliens, he seems to prefer holding them at arm’s length. Aliens are just as camera-shy in Disclosure Day, Spielberg’s newest ostensible examination of them. The movie hinges on a whistleblower releasing evidence of the government’s encounters with UFOs, yet it’s remarkably short on extraterrestrial spectacle. Yet the film isn’t meant to be a reflection of our present; it’s a distillation of Spielberg’s decades-long thesis about aliens.

Breaking:
How the World Cup Explains the World

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Rosin: So you told me you expected to hate this World Cup, but you love it. Foer: Well, it’s almost a trope that everybody dislikes a World Cup before it begins, because usually, there’s some overlay of autocracy. You know, if you think too much about the World Cup, you go into bad places, but if you experience the World Cup, it’s amazing—or interesting. That’s not there during a World Cup, and it’s frankly, I think, a relief for fans to revert to a much more innocent state during a World Cup. But there’s this drive that they have to complete their careers by winning, in Messi’s case, the second World Cup, or to be the all-time leading scorer in the World Cup.

Trending:
Perhaps France Should Reconsider AC

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Thousands of schools across France (and elsewhere in Europe) have closed or changed hours, but others, also without air-conditioning, have remained open. Tuesday was the hottest day recorded in France in nearly 80 years. Since the heat wave started, two children died in an over-hot car, and the rush to cool off has had its own terrible consequences—at least 48 drownings across France since the heat wave began last week, according to French authorities. Macron, in a message on X, had urged people to look out for one another during the heat wave, particularly children and the elderly. Saheb considered that message insufficient and criticized Macron for failing to do more to help France adapt to this climate emergency.

This Just In:
AI Can’t Fix the Student-Motivation Problem

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Although access exploded, from reaching 40,000 students in 2023 to nearly 1 million this year, actual uptake—whether students use it—has stagnated. A tool designed to respond to questions and ask follow-ups can’t help a student who doesn’t engage or know what to ask. An AI tutor may be able to deliver math problems that are perfectly calibrated to a student’s level. Even among the driven few, only a fraction of kids use ed-tech tools such as Khanmigo enough to see any gains. Training AI in the skills of the best teachers would seem to be far easier to scale than finding and training more teachers.

Today:
Alan Greenspan Was ‘Not Quite God’

NEWS | 26 June 2026
On Monday, Alan Greenspan died at the age of 100. The markets trust it. Greenspan and the Federal Open Markets Committee kept them higher than Bush would have liked, to avoid destabilizing price increases. It weathered the Asian financial crisis. Greenspan had believed in lightly regulated markets, trusting that financial firms were in the business of pricing risk and correcting excesses.

Top Stories:
My New Life With the Palantir Chore Coat

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Nothing about the Palantir chore coat makes any sense. The Palantir chore coat is made by the same Palantir named in homage to Lord of the Rings, the same Palantir that has developed a reputation as ruthlessly committed to any number of national-security imperatives, and, yes, the same Palantir that builds AI tools for the military and tracks migrants for ICE. A plastic card certified that this was a genuine Palantir chore coat, No. “Oh shit, that’s the Palantir chore coat!” a young guy in a white T-shirt and a gold chain yelled at me as I walked down a street in Lower Manhattan. That creates sort of this viral reaction.” If nothing else, the Palantir chore coat is an elaborate troll.

World:
The 10,000-Year Flood

NEWS | 26 June 2026
David and Cheryl Chambers bought their property along the Guadalupe River in 2008, the day the for-sale sign went up. Tamir Kalifa for The Atlantic Patrons gather at Howdy’s Restaurant, Bar & Chill, a honky-tonk adjoining the Blue Oak RV Park. It might as well have been a 10,000-year flood. The flood appears to have killed more people on the short stretch of riverbank near Blue Oak and HTR than anywhere else. At least 135 people were killed, including 28 at Camp Mystic, four at Blue Oak, and 37 at HTR, making this flood Texas’s deadliest in more than a century.

Current Events:
Atlantic Trivia: Dessert

NEWS | 26 June 2026
You might see where the week is going at this point. Today, we move on to our dessert course. Atlantic Trivia Patisserie Origins Agriculture From a story (opens in new tab) by Megan Garber What French confections, during an early-2010s surge of popularity, were variously said to look like “psychedelic Oreos” and “whoopie pies on acid”? Show Hint Ladurée is a purveyor.

News Flash:
Trump Is Making the 250th Small

NEWS | 26 June 2026
Sign up for Inside the Trump Presidency, a newsletter featuring coverage of the second Trump term. Tonight, Trump made a brief appearance at the Great American State Fair in Washington, D.C., which was supposed to be a 250th-birthday celebration for the greatest democracy in human history. It has better people, a better military, a better economy. The United States is worth the loyalty of every citizen because of what it is, because of its eternal character. Instead, he told America that he is great, and that because he is great, America is great, and thanks to him, it is now better than everywhere else.