The CrowdStrike Failure Was a Warning
Digital disaster should not happen so easily.
![Animated image of an airplane](https://cdn.statically.io/img/cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/lLgfWyrerdRp57k1vDnwubD5yxA=/438x0:1563x1125/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/07/crowdstrike_plane/original.gif)
Digital disaster should not happen so easily.
Becoming the British prime minister means giving top-secret orders—immediately—that could determine the fate of the world.
The party that’s rallying around a convicted felon, whatever he may do, is the one to worry about.
Par for the course. Trump is Trump. But imagine the response if Joe Biden had said it.
Bridge collapse, earthquake, eclipse—surely the heavens and the Biden administration are up to something.
Words matter. Call it an “election-style event.”
What chaos theory has to teach us about human events
Dictators and even voters can turn elections into mere pageantry.
You can’t understand politics just by being rational. Where would QAnon and sorcery fit in?
The former president is inciting violence against the nation’s top general. America’s response is distracted and numb.