The Cars Always Win
New York’s stalled congestion-pricing plan was a rare chance to try something different in American transportation.
![Traffic in New York City](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/vz79YdEeTvfPY5A8Yi8QTaf8Zr0=/859x0:3067x2208/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/06/GettyImages_1134492102/original.jpg)
New York’s stalled congestion-pricing plan was a rare chance to try something different in American transportation.
Is gazpacho salsa?
A lot went wrong with COVID, but the responses that worked could help guide us in future pandemics.
Our food system could have been so different.
She was born as the first U.S. surge began, and we’ve been living in that reality ever since.
An epidemiologist joins five Atlantic parents to discuss just how long their pandemic trade-offs can hold.
The pandemic set a devastating record today. It will not be the last.
And a whole lot of other diseases
The tagging system was invented years before it became practical.
Injuries are the most common cause of death if you're under 44, and about one-fifth are connected to car accidents.