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Netanyahu Has Got to Go


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WHEN I GOT BACK FROM VIETNAM some 50-plus years ago, all I wanted to do was get on with my life. My experience in the war as an Army intelligence case officer had dispelled any doubts that I’d had when I’d first arrived in Saigon that the war was not only a loser, but criminal. After a year there I’d firmly concluded that the wreckage we unleashed on that benighted country and its peoples far outweighed the lofty goals Washington claimed for continuing the war at its murderous rate. 

Netanyahu has rebuffed US demands for scaling back the violence and pursuing a Palestinian state solution (MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Image)

Now back home in Boston in 1970, I suppressed my rage and depression about the war and focused on  finishing college, finding a mate and deciding on a career, possibly teaching world history to adolescents so that they might avoid the trap of knee-jerk patriotism and their own Vietnam.

Alas, two events soon upended my deliberate disinterest: The U.S. invasion of Cambodia, an insane expansion of the Indochina battlefield, and then publication of the Pentagon Papers, which confirmed my many suspicions about the criminal origins and prosecution of the war. But it was the devious Nixon administration’s backing of South Vietnam’s corrupt and compromised leadership, moreover, that was the main impediment to any kind of “win” in the war, much less any kind of peace, in the near future. 

They both had to go. 

So I reluctantly discarded my carefully tended stoicism and signed up with Vietnam Veterans Against the War. Writing, not the classroom, became my destination. I was good enough at it that it eventually set me on a path toward a career doing the kind of investigative journalism that probed the lies and deceptions in which too many top CIA and other national security officials, whether Republicans or Democrats, cocooned themselves.

The Thread

Where’s this leading? Here at SpyTalk, we’ve endeavored to hew closely to our self-declared franchise of reporting on “the intersection of intelligence, foreign policy and military operations,” as we like to say, and steering clear of the hyper-partisan politics and emotions ruling the day. Of course, that’s practically impossible when Donald Trump, the once and possibly future president, upends national security norms by, say, publicly favoring Vladimir Putin’s version of election interference over the findings of his own intelligence agencies, or sharing top secret intelligence with Russian officials in the Oval Office, or illegally squirreling away classified documents in his various homes, or prompting violent attacks on the FBI, prosecutors and judges, not to mention presidential electors and the U.S. Capitol. 

Still, we don’t harp on them. We leave the shout fests to cable news shows and social media.  

But the Israeli campaign in Gaza has pushed us to take a stand. 

Israel’s pursuit of Hamas was initially righteous, we believe, in response to the Islamic extremists’ genocidal Oct. 7 rampage. But it’s turned into something else: the slaughter of Palestinian men, women and children without justification: the rescue or return of Israeli hostages and the effective eradication of Hamas. By its egregious actions, Israel has now ceded any moral high ground it possessed when its campaign in Gaza began. And for that Israel Prime Minister is almost solely to blame.

Not our issue? I wish it weren’t. Despite my reluctance to wade into such murky and complicated moral and political issues, I believe we have a mandate because of where the leading opposition to Netanyahu is centered: His own intelligence and security agencies.

And here’s why.

Netanyahu, who has always presented himself to the Israeli electorate as the only political leader who could guarantee the country’s security, has long had a fraught relationship with intelligence, military and security chiefs. 

He began to come under criticism from his own handpicked Mossad chief Meir Dagan in 2011 over their opposing views on how to neutralize the  threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program.

Until then, Dagan had favored continuing the intelligence agency’s clandestine  program of targeted assassinations and sabotage that had already liquidated a half dozen of Iran’s nuclear scientists and heavily damaged some of its nuclear enrichment facilities. By using such methods, Dagan felt Israel could achieve its aim of halting the nuclear program while avoiding an all-out war with Iran. Such a war, he and many of Israel’s military chiefs argued, would be costly for Israel and still  wouldn’t succeed in destroying Iran’s nuclear program since that would require repeated bombing sorties, which  the Israeli air force was incapable of conducting at such a distance from Iran. Israel also lacked the bunker-busting munitions capable of destroying Iran’s deeply buried nuclear facilities. 

But Netanyahu lost his faith in the utility of the Mossad’s clandestine measures and ordered the air force to begin practicing to deliver what he believed would be a one-time, knock-out punch to Iran’s nuclear aspirations. In response, Dagan, who was about to resign from the Mossad in protest, summoned reporters to the agency’s headquarters and publicly accused Netanyahu of leading the country into disaster. 

“That someone is elected does not mean that he is smart,” Dagan said, according to Rise and Kill,  author Ronen Bergman’s masterful 2018 history of Israel’s targeted assassination program.

Mossad chief Meir Dagan was so opposed to Netanyahu’s plan to attack Iran in 2011 that he finally went public with his differences. (Haaretz—Moti Milrod)

Dagan even went so far as to brief then-CIA Director Leon Panetta about Netanyahu’s plans, which prompted President Barack Obama to warn Netanyahu not to attack Iran. 

Many other top Israeli military and intelligence chiefs also made known their opposition to the attack, forcing Netanyahu to postpone it several times and, finally, to scrap it.

The next time Netanyahu butted heads with his intelligence and military chiefs occurred soon after his re-election in late 2022, when his coalition of ultra-rightwing and orthodox religious parties announced their plan to limit the authority of Israel’s Supreme Court, which would remove the only check on his government. 

Netanyahu’s plan sparked massive protests, bringing hundreds of thousands of Israelis into the streets who charged that the judicial overhaul would destroy Israel’s democracy and geld the only institution that could block the government’s extremist policies from becoming law. While Israel’s top legal authorities, business leaders and military reservists led the protests, the Mossad and the Shin Bet domestic security service shockingly allowed its rank-and-file members to join the protests. 

That’s not all.

Last September, after the protests and counter-protests by Netanyahu’s supporters threatened to erupt into civil war, a group of more than 180 former senior officials from the Mossad, Shin Bet, the military and police joined the protests, warning that the deep divisions in Israeli society caused by judicial overhaul debate were undermining Israel’s unity in the face of mounting threats from the West Bank, Lebanon and Iran. And in unprecedented statements of opposition to the country’s leadership, these former officials, all veterans of Israel’s wars, declared that Netanyahu’s policies were the biggest threat to the country’s future and well-being. 

“We were used to dealing with external threats,” said Tamir Pardo, a former head of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency and a leader of the new group. “We’ve been through wars, through military operations and all of a sudden you realize that the greatest threat to the state of Israel is internal.”

“Mr. Security”  

The Oct. 7 attack by Hamas, in which some 1,200 Israelis were killed and 240 taken hostage, represented Israel’s worst military disaster since the 1973 Yom Kippur War, when Prime Minister Golda Meir and her army chiefs dismissed intelligence warning of a combined Egyptian and Syrian attack.  In the wake of Hamas’ bloody campaign, Netanyahu, who had taken to calling himself “Mr. Security,” blamed his intelligence chiefs for not warning him—and indeed reports soon surfaced that his intelligence chiefs ignored warnings that Hamas was preparing for a full frontal invasion of Israel. But the prime minister’s attempt to shift blame to his intelligence chiefs drew a sharp rebuke from the head of his own war cabinet, Benny Gantz, who declared, “The prime minister must retract his statement and stop addressing this matter.” 

Still, Netanyahu has managed to remain in office, promising a thorough investigation of how Hamas managed to pull off such a devastating attack—but only after the Israeli army has achieved “absolute victory” over Hamas and the war is over. As Israelis rallied to the government in response to the attack, calls for new elections were muted. But with the war now in its fourth month, with more than 100 hostages still being held, and with relations with the United States increasingly strained over Netanyahu’s refusal to consider the creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, patience with the Israeli leader is now wearing thin. 

Opponents, charging that Netanyahu lacks a clear plan for how to get Israel out of Gaza, are now openly calling for new elections. They say personal and political considerations are guiding his decision-making, not the country’s best interest or the safe return of the hostages. They cite the three indictments that Netanyahu faces for corruption — charges that could send him to prison if he’s convicted.

Just one of repeated mass protests against Netanyahu’s proposed judicial overhaul legislation, in Tel Aviv Aug 19, 2023. (Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90)

“When the prime minister says ‘absolute victory,’ ’war until 2025,’ he knows that if that’s the case the hostages will die and return in coffins,” said Eyal Ben Reuven, a reserve Israeli general.  “A long war in enemy territory is not a good thing.”

Last week, Gadi Eisenkot,  a member of Netanyahu’s influential War Cabinet and a former military chief whose son and nephew were killed in the Gaza war, said that only a negotiated deal could free the remaining hostages. His remarks were a direct challenge to Netanyahu’s insistence that sustained military force is the best way to win their release. Even more importantly, Eisenkot also called for early elections to restore the public’s trust in their leaders.

The Gaza war, meanwhile, has inflamed the wider Arab world, generated new fronts in Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, reinvigorated Islamist militants from the occupied West Bank to Africa, and—important to us— implicated the United States in a brutal Israeli assault on Palestinians that, if it’s not actual genocide, now looks very much like it. While it’s impossible to predict how the Gaza war will end, it’s clear to us at SpyTalk that any solution to the morass in the Middle East must begin with the removal of Netanyahu from office. And as the spearhead of that removal likely resides in Israel’s much respected intelligence services, we will cover it. 

Jonathan Broder contributed deep reporting on Israel to this piece.


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Selected Articles

Can Netanyahu Outlast This War?


A conversation with Yair Rosenberg about the prime minister’s failures and what might be next for the Israeli government

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu walks away with a set of stairs in the background

Spencer Platt / Getty

January 24, 2024, 6:43 PM ET

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.

“It’s hard to remember at this point, but before the Hamas slaughter on October 7, Israel was embroiled in the worst civic unrest since its founding,” my colleague Yair Rosenberg wrote earlier this month. Most Israelis have since shifted their focus from that unrest, which was caused by the government’s attempt to subordinate Israel’s judiciary to its politicians.

At the same time, many Israeli citizens remain at odds with the government’s hard-right factions over the country’s future, and Gaza’s—and those tensions are only ramping up as the Israel-Hamas war continues. I talked with Yair about what could be next for the Israeli government, Netanyahu’s profound failure, and how to stay informed about the war while avoiding misinformation.

First, here are three new stories from The Atlantic:

A Democracy in Crisis

Isabel Fattal: You wrote a few weeks after the Hamas attack that “the disaster of October 7 was the overdetermined outcome of years of Netanyahu’s poor choices.” Can Netanyahu outlast this war?

Yair Rosenberg: Israelis rallied around the flag after the Hamas massacre, but they didn’t rally around Netanyahu. That has been very consistent. Netanyahu hasn’t improved his standing: His current coalition has 64 seats in Parliament, out of 120, but is polling at about 46 seats if elections were to be held today. That’s an extraordinary collapse. Most Israelis surveyed say that they prefer other contenders for prime minister and that they want Netanyahu to resign either now or after the war.

Isabel: Which factions in Israeli politics have gained and lost in the polls since October 7?

Yair: The main beneficiary in the polls has been an opposition party run by Benny Gantz, a former chief of the Israeli army. He is a centrist figure whose party is simply called the National Unity Party. Its whole idea is, Israeli politics has gotten corrupt and dirty; Netanyahu is on trial and in bed with all these extremists; and we will bring reasoned and sober judgment back to Israeli politics. It’s an affect more than a set of policies.

That’s one of several opposition parties that ran against Netanyahu in the most recent election. After October 7, it joined the government to create a consensus coalition to conduct the war effort and help ensure that decisions would not be dominated by far-right interests. Gantz and his party have since gained a lot in the polls, towering over the field.

But there’s no law on the books that Netanyahu has to go to elections. He can just wait a couple of years until he is officially required to hold them, if nobody else in his coalition breaks ranks and collapses it before then. When you fail as comprehensively as Netanyahu has failed—by his own standards, because he ran as the man who would secure Israel, and by the standards of the state of Israel, which was created to protect one of the most persecuted populations in the history of the world from things like the Hamas massacre—some politicians might resign. But Netanyahu has never shown any inclination to give up power and has always clung to it, no matter the cost. He’s going to try every trick in his book to remain prime minister.

Isabel: You’ve written: “While the reckoning over Israel’s judiciary has been postponed … the fundamental tensions that compelled the crisis remain.” How do you see these tensions within Israel playing out now that, as you’ve reported, the hard-right government factions are turning their focus from Israel’s judicial crisis to resettling Gaza?

Yair: Israel’s far right cannot fight a two-front war against the Israeli majority. Initially, it convulsed Israeli society with this plan to hollow out Israel’s Supreme Court, which caused the largest sustained protest movement in Israeli history. It looked like that was going to be the dominant story of Netanyahu’s government. And then October 7 happened, and a lot of Israelis reassessed. They decided that they’d been bickering over small things while their enemies capitalized on their disarray.

There’s no appetite for the judicial overhaul now—no appetite to fight over it, no appetite to revisit it. And the far right knows that. It’s now going to put all its energy into pressuring Netanyahu to permanently displace Palestinians from Gaza and resettle the area. (Israel pulled all its settlers and troops out of Gaza in 2005.) This is a long-standing dream of many activists in the settler movement and is being pushed by many people in the parties that Netanyahu depends on to stay in power.

Israel’s current governing coalition contains several far-right parties that exercise massively more influence than their numbers would suggest, because they can threaten to leave the coalition if they don’t get their way. As a result, Netanyahu constantly tries to placate them, even though their preferences often don’t align with the Israeli majority. For example, on resettling Gaza, polls show that Israelis oppose doing that almost two to one. But the third of Israelis who do want to resettle Gaza are overrepresented in Israel’s coalition and could force the issue.

We should watch this as any sort of election season heats up in Israel, because Netanyahu historically makes his most far-right promises when he’s running for reelection, to get the base back onside.

Isabel: You’ve been writing about the Israel-Hamas war itself, but also about how media outlets have covered it. In a recent article, for example, you demonstrated that several damning quotes from Israel’s war cabinet cited as evidence of genocidal intent by journalists and jurists are actually erroneous or mistranslations. Your reporting led to corrections in multiple major news outlets.

What advice would you give a layperson trying to keep track of news about the war without getting mired in misinformation?

Yair: Fundamentally, my job as a reporter is to tell readers what is true, as best I can determine it. In this environment, that can be challenging for professionals, let alone everyday readers. But in general, when people are sifting through information, they should be particularly suspicious of anything they see that too easily confirms what they already want to believe, whatever that may be. As human beings, we’re most likely to uncritically share things that affirm what we want to be true, without subjecting it to the same scrutiny as something that contradicts our views. The way I work as a writer and reporter is if I see something that too conveniently confirms my thesis, that’s the piece of evidence I look into with the most skeptical eye.

This may seem obvious, but people should not use social-media platforms as their primary source of information on complex geopolitical issues. With their character limits, lack of moderation, and problematic incentives that privilege inflammatory virality over accuracy, these sites were not designed for detailed discussion of difficult topics, whether that’s economic policy or global conflict. It’s also unhealthy for our civic discourse when we try to have these conversations in places that are simply not built for them.

And it’s very hard to distinguish what’s real or what’s not on these platforms without years of experience and training. Someone who has been covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for a decade or more will simply know much more about all the players involved, the biases of various sources, and what sorts of traps get laid by different groups of people doing propaganda for each side. If you’re new to all of it, you’re going to fall into every single pothole, because you don’t know they’re there. It’s not that longtime reporters with regional expertise are magically better at this; it’s that they’ve learned from the hard experience of driving through all the potholes for years.

Related:

Today’s News

  1. Ohio lawmakers banned gender-affirming care for minors after voting to override Governor Mike DeWine’s veto. The law will limit transgender-youth access to treatments such as hormone therapy, and it will also block trans girls from joining girls’ and women’s sports teams at schools.
  2. The Russian defense ministry claimed that a Russian military transport plane crashed in a border region near Ukraine, killing all 74 people on board, including 65 Ukrainian prisoners of war. Russia accused Ukraine of shooting down the plane with missiles; Ukraine has not confirmed or denied the allegations.
  3. The Supreme Court declined to halt the execution of an Alabama death-row inmate, Kenneth Smith, who objected to being the first person executed using the untested method of nitrogen gas.

Dispatches

Explore all of our newsletters here.

Evening Read

An image of a shrine to a computer mouseIllustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty.

We’ve Forgotten How to Use Computers

By Ian Bogost

Once upon a time, long before smartphones or even laptops were ubiquitous, the computer mouse was new, and it was thrilling. The 1984 Macintosh wasn’t the first machine to come with one, but it was the first to popularize the gizmo for ordinary people. Proper use of the mouse was not intuitive. Many people had a hard time moving and clicking at the same time, and “double-clicking” was a skill one had to learn. Still, anyone could put a hand on the thing, move it around on a table, and see the results on-screen: A little cursor moved along with you. “Pointing is a metaphor we all know,” Steve Jobs told Playboy in 1985. The mouse was central to the computer’s populist future, which wasn’t yet assured at the time.

But the Mousing Age that followed didn’t last for very long.

Read the full article.

More From The Atlantic

Culture Break

An image of Greta Gerwig on the set of Barbie, looking at a laptop, surrounded by Barbie stars (including Margot Robbie)Jaap Buitendijk / Warner Bros. Pictures

Debate. Why didn’t Greta Gerwig get a Best Director nomination for the Oscars? David Sims investigates.

Read.The Marigold Sonnets,” a poem by Amy Gerstler:

“Today I’ll listen to whatever music Spotify has in mind. / Concerto for Black Holes and Slime Molds by the Panty Sniffers? / That algorithm knows me so well! I’ve pitched myself under / this magnolia tree, heart first, before I get lobbed anyplace / worse.”

Play our daily crossword.

Stephanie Bai contributed to this newsletter.

When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.


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Saved Web Pages - Audio Posts

Can Netanyahu Outlast This War?


A conversation with Yair Rosenberg about the prime minister’s failures and what might be next for the Israeli government

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu walks away with a set of stairs in the background

Spencer Platt / Getty

January 24, 2024, 6:43 PM ET

This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.

“It’s hard to remember at this point, but before the Hamas slaughter on October 7, Israel was embroiled in the worst civic unrest since its founding,” my colleague Yair Rosenberg wrote earlier this month. Most Israelis have since shifted their focus from that unrest, which was caused by the government’s attempt to subordinate Israel’s judiciary to its politicians.

At the same time, many Israeli citizens remain at odds with the government’s hard-right factions over the country’s future, and Gaza’s—and those tensions are only ramping up as the Israel-Hamas war continues. I talked with Yair about what could be next for the Israeli government, Netanyahu’s profound failure, and how to stay informed about the war while avoiding misinformation.

First, here are three new stories from The Atlantic:

A Democracy in Crisis

Isabel Fattal: You wrote a few weeks after the Hamas attack that “the disaster of October 7 was the overdetermined outcome of years of Netanyahu’s poor choices.” Can Netanyahu outlast this war?

Yair Rosenberg: Israelis rallied around the flag after the Hamas massacre, but they didn’t rally around Netanyahu. That has been very consistent. Netanyahu hasn’t improved his standing: His current coalition has 64 seats in Parliament, out of 120, but is polling at about 46 seats if elections were to be held today. That’s an extraordinary collapse. Most Israelis surveyed say that they prefer other contenders for prime minister and that they want Netanyahu to resign either now or after the war.

Isabel: Which factions in Israeli politics have gained and lost in the polls since October 7?

Yair: The main beneficiary in the polls has been an opposition party run by Benny Gantz, a former chief of the Israeli army. He is a centrist figure whose party is simply called the National Unity Party. Its whole idea is, Israeli politics has gotten corrupt and dirty; Netanyahu is on trial and in bed with all these extremists; and we will bring reasoned and sober judgment back to Israeli politics. It’s an affect more than a set of policies.

That’s one of several opposition parties that ran against Netanyahu in the most recent election. After October 7, it joined the government to create a consensus coalition to conduct the war effort and help ensure that decisions would not be dominated by far-right interests. Gantz and his party have since gained a lot in the polls, towering over the field.

But there’s no law on the books that Netanyahu has to go to elections. He can just wait a couple of years until he is officially required to hold them, if nobody else in his coalition breaks ranks and collapses it before then. When you fail as comprehensively as Netanyahu has failed—by his own standards, because he ran as the man who would secure Israel, and by the standards of the state of Israel, which was created to protect one of the most persecuted populations in the history of the world from things like the Hamas massacre—some politicians might resign. But Netanyahu has never shown any inclination to give up power and has always clung to it, no matter the cost. He’s going to try every trick in his book to remain prime minister.

Isabel: You’ve written: “While the reckoning over Israel’s judiciary has been postponed … the fundamental tensions that compelled the crisis remain.” How do you see these tensions within Israel playing out now that, as you’ve reported, the hard-right government factions are turning their focus from Israel’s judicial crisis to resettling Gaza?

Yair: Israel’s far right cannot fight a two-front war against the Israeli majority. Initially, it convulsed Israeli society with this plan to hollow out Israel’s Supreme Court, which caused the largest sustained protest movement in Israeli history. It looked like that was going to be the dominant story of Netanyahu’s government. And then October 7 happened, and a lot of Israelis reassessed. They decided that they’d been bickering over small things while their enemies capitalized on their disarray.

There’s no appetite for the judicial overhaul now—no appetite to fight over it, no appetite to revisit it. And the far right knows that. It’s now going to put all its energy into pressuring Netanyahu to permanently displace Palestinians from Gaza and resettle the area. (Israel pulled all its settlers and troops out of Gaza in 2005.) This is a long-standing dream of many activists in the settler movement and is being pushed by many people in the parties that Netanyahu depends on to stay in power.

Israel’s current governing coalition contains several far-right parties that exercise massively more influence than their numbers would suggest, because they can threaten to leave the coalition if they don’t get their way. As a result, Netanyahu constantly tries to placate them, even though their preferences often don’t align with the Israeli majority. For example, on resettling Gaza, polls show that Israelis oppose doing that almost two to one. But the third of Israelis who do want to resettle Gaza are overrepresented in Israel’s coalition and could force the issue.

We should watch this as any sort of election season heats up in Israel, because Netanyahu historically makes his most far-right promises when he’s running for reelection, to get the base back onside.

Isabel: You’ve been writing about the Israel-Hamas war itself, but also about how media outlets have covered it. In a recent article, for example, you demonstrated that several damning quotes from Israel’s war cabinet cited as evidence of genocidal intent by journalists and jurists are actually erroneous or mistranslations. Your reporting led to corrections in multiple major news outlets.

What advice would you give a layperson trying to keep track of news about the war without getting mired in misinformation?

Yair: Fundamentally, my job as a reporter is to tell readers what is true, as best I can determine it. In this environment, that can be challenging for professionals, let alone everyday readers. But in general, when people are sifting through information, they should be particularly suspicious of anything they see that too easily confirms what they already want to believe, whatever that may be. As human beings, we’re most likely to uncritically share things that affirm what we want to be true, without subjecting it to the same scrutiny as something that contradicts our views. The way I work as a writer and reporter is if I see something that too conveniently confirms my thesis, that’s the piece of evidence I look into with the most skeptical eye.

This may seem obvious, but people should not use social-media platforms as their primary source of information on complex geopolitical issues. With their character limits, lack of moderation, and problematic incentives that privilege inflammatory virality over accuracy, these sites were not designed for detailed discussion of difficult topics, whether that’s economic policy or global conflict. It’s also unhealthy for our civic discourse when we try to have these conversations in places that are simply not built for them.

And it’s very hard to distinguish what’s real or what’s not on these platforms without years of experience and training. Someone who has been covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for a decade or more will simply know much more about all the players involved, the biases of various sources, and what sorts of traps get laid by different groups of people doing propaganda for each side. If you’re new to all of it, you’re going to fall into every single pothole, because you don’t know they’re there. It’s not that longtime reporters with regional expertise are magically better at this; it’s that they’ve learned from the hard experience of driving through all the potholes for years.

Related:

Today’s News

  1. Ohio lawmakers banned gender-affirming care for minors after voting to override Governor Mike DeWine’s veto. The law will limit transgender-youth access to treatments such as hormone therapy, and it will also block trans girls from joining girls’ and women’s sports teams at schools.
  2. The Russian defense ministry claimed that a Russian military transport plane crashed in a border region near Ukraine, killing all 74 people on board, including 65 Ukrainian prisoners of war. Russia accused Ukraine of shooting down the plane with missiles; Ukraine has not confirmed or denied the allegations.
  3. The Supreme Court declined to halt the execution of an Alabama death-row inmate, Kenneth Smith, who objected to being the first person executed using the untested method of nitrogen gas.

Dispatches

Explore all of our newsletters here.

Evening Read

An image of a shrine to a computer mouseIllustration by The Atlantic. Source: Getty.

We’ve Forgotten How to Use Computers

By Ian Bogost

Once upon a time, long before smartphones or even laptops were ubiquitous, the computer mouse was new, and it was thrilling. The 1984 Macintosh wasn’t the first machine to come with one, but it was the first to popularize the gizmo for ordinary people. Proper use of the mouse was not intuitive. Many people had a hard time moving and clicking at the same time, and “double-clicking” was a skill one had to learn. Still, anyone could put a hand on the thing, move it around on a table, and see the results on-screen: A little cursor moved along with you. “Pointing is a metaphor we all know,” Steve Jobs told Playboy in 1985. The mouse was central to the computer’s populist future, which wasn’t yet assured at the time.

But the Mousing Age that followed didn’t last for very long.

Read the full article.

More From The Atlantic

Culture Break

An image of Greta Gerwig on the set of Barbie, looking at a laptop, surrounded by Barbie stars (including Margot Robbie)Jaap Buitendijk / Warner Bros. Pictures

Debate. Why didn’t Greta Gerwig get a Best Director nomination for the Oscars? David Sims investigates.

Read.The Marigold Sonnets,” a poem by Amy Gerstler:

“Today I’ll listen to whatever music Spotify has in mind. / Concerto for Black Holes and Slime Molds by the Panty Sniffers? / That algorithm knows me so well! I’ve pitched myself under / this magnolia tree, heart first, before I get lobbed anyplace / worse.”

Play our daily crossword.

Stephanie Bai contributed to this newsletter.

When you buy a book using a link in this newsletter, we receive a commission. Thank you for supporting The Atlantic.


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@MotherJones: RT by @mikenov: Florida man facing 91 criminal counts wins New Hampshire primary https://t.co/JgRbW0mh1w



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@Cyberdefensecom: RT by @mikenov: DAY 26: I started to believe that General Gerasimov could be dead. If he is – if the Russians say that he died from a…