President Donald Trump opened his speech to world leaders at the World Economic Forum event in the mountain resort of Davos, Switzerland, by boasting about his record on the economy and telling Europe it was not going "in the right direction." Trump arrived in Switzerland with European officials and business leaders on edge because he is expected to press his case to expand the territory of the United States in the biggest way in decades by acquiring Denmark's Greenland territory. "Would you like me to say a few words of Greenland?" Trump asked the audience, partway through his speech, to scattered laughter in the audience. "I was going to leave it out of the speech, but I thought, I think I would have been reviewed very negatively." He added: "I have tremendous respect for both the people of Greenland and the people of Denmark. Tremendous respect. But every NATO ally has an obligation to be able to defend their own territory. And the fact is,...
On the Wednesday January 21, 2026, episode of The Excerpt podcast: The “crunchy mom” movement once centered on wellness and holistic living. Now, some adherents are embracing vaccine skepticism and aligning politically with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ’s Make America Healthy Again movement. USA TODAY extremism reporter Will Carless joins us to explain how the shift happened and why public health experts are concerned. In cities across the country, a growing number of American moms are embracing a lifestyle built around natural foods, fewer screens, homeschooling, and avoiding processed ingredients. On the surface, it sounds like a return to simplicity, part back to the land, part clean living. But something else is happening inside this movement, distrust of the medical system. Conspiracy theories about vaccines abound amid a political shift toward Health and Human Services Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and is Make America Healthy Again Agenda. Hello, and welcome to USA TODAY'...