Thanks to the continued support of CREDO members, Brady is working to keep our communities safe from gun violence

For more than 40 years, our long-time grantee partners at Brady: United Against Gun Violence have united gun owners and non-gun owners alike in the fight against gun violence and worked to ensure that every community is safer.

In July 2022, CREDO members voted to distribute donations to help Brady bolster its on-the-ground programs in areas most impacted by gun violence, hold the gun industry accountable in court, promote safe gun storage, and more. Since 1994, CREDO and our members have donated over $1 million to the organization.

Powered in part by the generosity of CREDO and our members, Brady had some recent victories and launched some great new initiatives. Here’s a quick rundown from the organization:

Recent Victories

The Brady Center

The Brady Center seeks to end the public health epidemic of gun violence. To achieve this life-saving goal, our work must address the root causes of the different types of violence fueling gun deaths and injuries in America. As with any epidemic, there are many approaches to eradicating gun violence. The best courses of action differ for each form of gun violence and community impacted. Focused on taking action, not sides, Brady is blazing the trail for an evidence-based, public health approach to preventing gun violence in America.

Our core programs—including End Family Fire, Brady Legal, and our supply-side programming —rely on innovative and proven strategies that don’t require legislative action. Over the past year, thanks to the generous support of partners like Credo, we have continued to expand and strengthen these life-saving efforts. The following paragraphs detail recent organizational achievements and updates since Credo’s investment in our gun violence prevention mission.

End Family Fire (EFF)

End Family Fire is a national public service advertising campaign from Brady and the Ad Council that debuted in August 2018. EFF recognizes that gun owners are an essential part of the gun violence prevention movement—and can prevent tragedies through safe gun storage. EFF initially focused on preventing unintentional shootings. In late 2020, we expanded the campaign to focus on another type of gun violence that is often not talked about: gun suicide. In the U.S., we lose 63 people a day to gun suicide—more than those who are lost to firearm murders and unintentional shootings combined.

In 2022, Brady launched a statewide EFF suicide prevention campaign in partnership with the Missouri Foundation for Health (MFH). The launch includes a geo-targeted multimedia PSA campaign, focused on promoting safe storage to prevent gun suicide, that will run for 2 years. This involved the development of localized EFF creative assets for distribution via television, radio, print, out-of-home, and digital display, along with a social media campaign targeting gun owners in Missouri. Through survey data comparing pre-and-post campaign, we’ve found that by September 2022 there were statistically significant increases among Missourian respondents in recognition of End Family Fire suicide prevention PSAs (40% baseline to 48% in Q3 2022) and the percent of those who report talking to friends and family about safe gun storage in the past six months (26% baseline to 35% in Q3 2022). These early results are promising reflections of the individual behavior change model and will continue to be monitored in the coming months.

Our collaboration with MFH underscores the growth and impact of EFF since its 2018 debut and exemplifies our vision for the program’s growth. We seek to replicate this geo-targeted work in other strategically-chosen cities/states/regions, such as those with high rates of gun ownership and/or incidents of family fire. We believe that concentrating EFF messaging—both related to unintentional shootings and gun suicide—in these higher-risk areas will maximize the campaign’s life-saving impact on gun owner attitude, awareness, and behavior.

Brady Legal

Brady Legal brings together a strong network of talent to provide pro bono representation to victims of gun violence and counter the gun industry’s well-financed influence and special protections. Our team has secured landmark precedents that hold gun companies and dealers accountable for the deaths and injuries they enable. To date, the program has won over $60 million in settlements and verdicts for gun violence victims and successfully pushed many gun dealers and manufacturers to adopt more responsible, safer business practices. Find more details below one of Brady’s new legal cases.

As part of its work, Brady Legal helps cities in the grips of gun violence hold manufacturers of “ghost guns” accountable. Ghost guns are untraceable guns made without serial numbers that are typically assembled with parts and kits that can be purchased online, without a background check. Credo’s support allowed us to fight, and win, against a motion to dismiss the case in December 2022. In the case, the City of Baltimore, represented by Brady Legal and Sanford Heisler Sharp, LLP, is suing Polymer80, Inc. — the largest “ghost gun” manufacturer in the U.S. — for fueling gun violence in Baltimore. Polymer80 accounts for 91% of all ghost guns recovered by police in Baltimore from January 2020 to April 2022. Prior to 2018, the Baltimore Police Department (BPD) had never recovered a ghost gun.

New Initiatives

Government Transparency for Gun Violence Prevention (GTGVP)

Brady stands out in the gun violence prevention (GVP) field in part because of our ‘supply-side’ approach to reduce gun crime. Instead of solely focusing on the shooter, Brady believes that we must also address the source or supplier of guns used in crime – namely, the gun industry and dealers who are contributing to and profiting from gun violence. Transparency is key to a successful supply-side approach, allowing us to identify and reform the gun businesses responsible for supplying crime guns; hold agencies accountable for failures in firearms industry regulation and enforcement; and expose how the powerful gun lobby influences decisions and policies at all levels of government.

Brady’s Government Transparency for Gun Violence Prevention (GTGVP) initiative was created to further these goals. Our transparency work is core to Brady’s mission, influencing and forwarding many of Brady’s other programs in addition to its important external impact on public awareness. Through public records requests and litigation, GTGVP gathers information and data on the firearms industry and government oversight; uses such data to inform our priorities and programs; and releases it to the public through published reports, data dashboards, and reputable news outlets.

New Project Launch: Firearms Procurement Project

Brady relies on our data from government transparency requests to inform our procurement work with state government and law enforcement agencies. Increasing industry transparency and identifying at-risk dealers is necessary to inform public officials which vendors are complying with the law and engaging in safe business practices. Starting in January 2023, we launched a responsible firearms procurement project, advocating for law enforcement agencies to buy from only law-abiding and otherwise responsible gun vendors. Taxpayers are the number one buyer of firearms in America. Altogether, taxpayers spend more than $5 billion a year to buy guns and ammunition for our nation’s law enforcement agencies. Our most recent analysis shows that California law enforcement agencies spent tens of millions of taxpayer dollars on gun dealers that have been cited for serious violations of the law. 

If you’d like to learn more or get involved with Win Without War, please visit their website, or follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Free Press is fighting for digital civil rights and holding Big Tech accountable, thanks to CREDO members

Our amazing grantee partners at Free Press advocate for equitable and just media policy and work to clean up disinformation around our elections, disrupt organized hate online, fight for affordable internet access, secure Net Neutrality and revive local journalism.

In July 2022, CREDO members voted to donate $25,292 to help Free Press fight for digital civil rights and hold Big Media and Big Tech accountable for amplifying hate and disinformation. Since 2005, CREDO and our members have donated $420,618 to the organization.

Powered in part by the generosity of CREDO and our members, Free Press had some recent victories and launched some great new initiatives. Here’s a quick rundown from the organization:

Recent Victories

CLOSING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE. First, a bit of a backstory: In 2021, Free Press Action advocacy paved the way for historic broadband provisions in the infrastructure package that President Biden signed into law. This investment in closing the digital divide included nearly $65 billion for broadband. A remarkable $14.2 billion of that total was dedicated to the creation of the FCC’s Affordable Connectivity Program. The program, which launched this past year, provides households living near the poverty line or enrolled in other federal-aid programs with up to $30 per month for the internet package of their choosing from participating providers — and $75 per month for people living on Tribal lands.

Since our CREDO grant, Free Press helped shape this program while working closely with the FCC — and the agency’s final order reflects many of our recommendations (no small feat given the agency’s even split between Democratic and Republican commissioners). These include rules protecting against the predatory practice of “upselling” and using unfair credit-checking practices to deny service. As of January 2023, 16 million households have signed up to take part in this program, making internet service more affordable and accessible to struggling families.

PRISON PHONE JUSTICE FOR FAMILIES OF INCARCERATED PEOPLE. We celebrated in December 2022 when the Martha Wright-Reed Just and Reasonable Communications Act passed; alongside partners like Color Of Change, Worth Rises, and the United Church of Christ’s Media Justice Ministry, Free Press Action advocated for the bill which will allow the FCC to regulate exorbitant prison phone rates. We appreciate CREDO’s ongoing support, which has given us the capacity to educate lawmakers about this bill over the past several years. We applauded another win in December, when the Merger Filing Fee Modernization Act passed, an antitrust bill that raises the fees for companies and adds new disclosure requirements.

LANDMARK PRIVACY AND CIVIL RIGHTS BILL. In 2022 Free Press Action played a strong role in shaping the American Data Privacy and Protection Act (ADPPA), the strongest-ever comprehensive privacy bill to advance in Congress. The bill borrowed from model legislation we developed with the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. While ADPPA was not enacted in 2022, it was voted out of committee in the House by a nearly unanimous bipartisan vote, setting the stage for advocacy and passage in the new Congress.

To help move the bill forward, Free Press Action was invited to speak to lawmakers about the need to address privacy alongside the growing disinformation crisis that is destabilizing our democracy. Senior Counsel and Director of Digital and Civil Rights Nora Benavidez participated in a congressional roundtable on the impact of mis- and disinformation on U.S. elections. “We must rein in abusive practices by social-media companies,” Benavidez said. “Their business models threaten to destabilize our democracy by amplifying lies and calls for violence, reaching audiences with a speed, precision and scale once unimaginable.”

STOPPED A MASSIVE GIVEAWAY TO MEDIA GIANTS. We’re seeing growing numbers of federal lawmakers introduce legislation like the JCPA in response to the local-news crisis. As these proposals emerge, policy analysis and advocacy in the public interest are needed, because, as analysis from Co-CEO Craig Aaron and Research Director S. Derek Turner shows, some federal proposals would benefit existing media giants — the very same companies that have gutted local newsrooms, spread disinformation and profited from runaway media consolidation. Thanks to our CREDO grant, Free Press Action led public-interest opposition to the so-called Journalism Competition and Preservation Act (JCPA) — an industry-written bill that would have given billions to incumbent media conglomerates like Fox, Sinclair and the hedge-fund vultures at Alden Global Capital — most recently preventing it from being snuck into a major defense-spending package.

New Initiatives

STOP TOXIC TWITTER. We saw hate speech and disinformation campaigns intensify online ahead of the 2022 midterm elections, and tech companies were falling short of taking the steps needed to protect democracy. Before taking over Twitter, Elon Musk vowed that the platform wouldn’t become a “free-for-all hellscape.” But a series of destructive decisions Musk made in the run-up and aftermath of the 2022 elections shows how much of a threat to democracy billionaire-controlled platforms pose.

Musk fired thousands of people, including mass layoffs of content moderators and the entire human-rights team. He reinstated Donald Trump and scores of white supremacists. He also ditched long-standing content-moderation rules and reversed Twitter’s ban on COVID-19 misinformation, while ushering in thousands of fake and fraudulent accounts under his new Twitter Blue subscription service. In a disturbing precedent, Musk temporarily banned several tech journalists who had been watchdogging him.

When Elon Musk took the helm of Twitter in October 2022, Free Press partnered with Accountable Tech, Color Of Change, Media Matters for America and other allies to stand up an advertiser boycott campaign that resulted in over 50 percent of the top 100 advertisers leaving Twitter. Co-CEO Jessica González and close allies also met directly with Musk, extracting an essential promise from the billionaire not to reinstate banned accounts before the midterm elections. The longer-term impacts of our Stop Toxic Twitter campaign are still being felt at the company, which as of January 2023 has seen a daily revenue drop of 40% compared to a year ago, and the continued departure of 500 top advertisers.

If you’d like to learn more or get involved with Free Press Action, please visit their website, or follow them on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram

Democracy Now!: Covering the Movements Changing America, and the World

Note from the CREDO team: This February, Democracy Now! is among three amazing groups that will receive a share of our monthly grant. Funding from the CREDO community will help produce its independent news hour, bringing tens of millions of people critical information about war and peace, threats to democracy, the climate crisis, abortion rights, gun control and more.

Read this important blog post from Amy Goodman, then click here to visit CREDODonations.com to cast your vote to help determine how we distribute our monthly grant to this organization and our other amazing grantees this February.

Going to where the silence is. That’s the responsibility of a journalist: giving a voice to those who have been forgotten, forsaken and beaten down by the powerful. It is the best reason I know to carry our pens, cameras and microphones out to the world.

When you hear someone speaking for themselves—whether it’s an elder from the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe or an aunt in Afghanistan—it challenges the stereotypes that fuel division and hate. It’s not that you have to agree with what you hear. How often do we agree with our own family members? But you start to understand where a person is coming from. That understanding is the beginning of peace.

The media can be the greatest force for peace on Earth. Instead, all too often, it’s wielded as a weapon of war. 

That’s why Democracy Now! is fighting to take the media back from government interests and corporations that, in the words of George Gerbner, late dean of the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, “have nothing to tell and everything to sell.”

On February 19, 1996, Democracy Now! aired for the first time on nine community radio stations. It was the only national daily election show in public broadcasting.

When the 1996 election wrapped up, we thought that Democracy Now! would wrap up as well. But there was more demand for the show after the elections than before. Why? People are hungry for real solutions and authentic voices—not just the same handful of pundits on the network shows who know so little about so much, explaining the world to us and getting it so wrong.

This month Democracy Now! is celebrating 27 years of independent reporting. Over the past quarter-century, our daily, global news hour has become one of the leading independent news outlets in the world, broadcasting on more than 1,500 public TV and radio stations around the world and reaching tens of millions of people through our website, www.democracynow.org, and our social media channels. We also have a Spanish-language website, www.democracynow.org/es

When we report on the climate emergency, our coverage isn’t brought to you by the oil, gas, coal and nuclear companies. When we cover war, our reporting isn’t sponsored by the weapons manufacturers. Our journalism is powered by the people, which gives us the editorial freedom to report on the issues that matter most: war and peace, the climate crisis, abortion rights, gun control, immigration, racism and police brutality, wealth inequality, LGBTQ rights, healthcare and much more.

Democracy Now! recently interviewed pioneering legal scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw about The College Board’s revision of its Advanced Placement African American studies high school curriculum, which removed Black Lives Matter, reparations and queer theory as required topics. The new curriculum was released on the first day of Black History Month, the same day as the funeral of 29-year-old Black father Tyre Nichols, killed by Memphis police last month. It also came after Florida’s Republican Governor Ron DeSantis banned the original AP Black studies class in Florida schools. The College Board, the nonprofit organization that administers Advanced Placement courses across the country, denies that it buckled to political pressure.

“Anybody who’s concerned about our democracy, anyone who’s concerned about authoritarianism has to wake up and pay attention to this, because this is how it happens,” Crenshaw told Democracy Now! Crenshaw coined the term “intersectionality” to study the overlapping or intersecting social identities and systems of oppression, domination or discrimination people experience.

Watch our full interview with Kimberlé Crenshaw here. 

We also recently interviewed filmmaker Shaunak Sen about his Oscar-nominated documentary, All That Breathes, which follows two brothers who rescue black kite birds in New Delhi. The brothers have saved about 25,000 black kites from the dirty air in India’s capital over the last 15 years. “When you live in the city of Delhi, you’re almost always preoccupied with the air,” said Sen, who explained why he centered the film on the brothers and purposely stayed away from obvious environmental and political messages. “The idea is to open the conversation and not close it,” he said. All That Breathes became the only film ever to win the best documentary prize at both the Sundance and Cannes film festivals last year. 

In these challenging times, as we face innumerable threats to our democracy—from the overturning of Roe v. Wade to election denialism to the climate crisis—we need a media that covers power, not covers for power.

We need a media that is the fourth estate, not for the state.

And we need a media that covers the movements that create static and make history. That is the power of independent media.

That is a media that will save us.

Democracy Now!

How Evergreen Action Is Leading the Fight for Bold Climate Action

Note from the CREDO team: This February, Evergreen Action is among three amazing groups that will receive a share of our monthly grant. Funding from the CREDO community will help Evergreen engage directly with federal and state officials to pass and implement ambitious climate policies to defeat the climate crisis and build a thriving, just, and inclusive clean energy future.

Read this important blog post from Evergreen Action’s Jamal Raad, then click here to visit CREDODonations.com to cast your vote to help determine how we distribute our monthly grant to this organization and our other amazing grantees this February.

The climate crisis is both an extraordinary challenge and an enormous opportunity to create a better, more equitable future.

Almost three years ago, we launched Evergreen Action with a mission to create an all-out mobilization to defeat the climate crisis and accelerate the transition to a just and equitable economy run on 100 percent clean energy. 

Since then, we have successfully influenced the national climate policy landscape in a big way by developing bold climate policy and pairing it with campaign-style communications, digital, and advocacy tactics. The Biden administration has adopted significant pieces of our Evergreen Action Plan, our climate roadmap, and we helped play a pivotal role in the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), which represents the largest climate investments ever made in our nation’s history. 

Our policy vision is guided by three North Stars on our mission to defeat the climate crisis: Raising standards, catalyzing investment, and centering justice.

  • Raising Standards: A standard establishes the date by which the most polluting sectors of our economy must achieve 100 percent clean energy. We write bold, actionable roadmaps for policymakers that lay out stringent clean energy standards in places like the power sector to cut dangerous carbon pollution. For example: By achieving 100 percent clean electricity by 2035, we can not only meet President Biden’s climate commitments—we can also decarbonize our homes, our cars, and some parts of heavy industry. That’s, well, powerful. 
  • Catalyzing Investment: Investments in a clean energy economy will ensure we meet those standards and put people to work in good union jobs. The Inflation Reduction Act was a huge step towards transformative investments in a clean energy future, and we’re already seeing the positive effects of this law in communities around the country today—with tax credits for home electrification, rebates for electric vehicles, a booming renewable energy industry, and much more. We’re fighting for investments like these, which create good jobs with family-supporting wages and benefits, uplift communities, and concretely improve lives. 
  • Centering and Advancing Justice: Prioritizing justice in our standards and investments helps to counter our nation’s legacy of economic, environmental and racial injustice, and jumpstart opportunities for people who have been left behind. We advocate for policies that both decrease greenhouse gas pollution and directly counter long-standing environmental racism, recognizing that the climate crisis is inextricably linked with the systemic racism that allows polluters to disproportionately impact communities of color. 

The passage of the IRA was huge, but not enough. In the months and years ahead, we will work to ensure the effective implementation of the IRA and push for additional executive and state action to fully meet our climate, economic, and environmental justice goals. 

This is a deeply exciting time to be in the climate movement. We’re at an inflection point in the fight for a thriving and just clean energy future, but our work is far from over. Together and with your support, we will continue to create the blueprint for exactly how federal and state policymakers can create a better future through actionable, ambitious climate policies that meet the political moment and the scale of the crisis.

You can learn more about our work and our impact at EvergreenAction.com.

Life After Hate is Making a Difference in Combating Violent Far-Right Extremism

Note from the CREDO team: This February, Life After Hate is among three amazing groups that will receive a share of our monthly grant. Funding from the CREDO community will help its crucial work to combat violent extremism. By interrupting violence committed to advance extremist beliefs, the organization can move toward a world that allows people to change and contribute to a society without violence.

Read this important blog post from LAH’s CEO Patrick R. Riccards then click here to visit CREDODonations.com to cast your vote to help determine how we distribute our monthly grant to this organization and our other amazing grantees this February.

Why Life After Hate?

Now, more than ever, our nation needs individuals and organizations who are committed to combating violent far-right extremism and who offer practical paths to help individuals disengage from their lives of violent and destructive hate, to a place where they can take accountability for their past actions, and reintegrate into society in meaningful, productive ways. 

The United States continues to experience a surge in homegrown domestic terror incidents. This reality is flooded into our lives on a daily basis through social media platforms and news outlets. The deadly violence of domestic terrorism continues to threaten our nation on overwhelming levels. Today, violent far-right extremism (VFRE) assumes many forms. It is white supremacism, antisemitic, male supremacism, anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim, anti-government, anti-Latino, anti-Asian, and it is all pro-hate. 

Decades of research has concluded that individuals join VFRE because it provides them a place of belonging in a society where they feel disconnected and without hope.

It doesn’t have to be this way. For those who are prepared to account for their pasts, for those who are ready to leave their VFRE families behind, for those who are prepared to write a second chapter of their life focused on second chances and doing good, there is life after hate. Our efforts, and the results of our initiatives, demonstrate what is possible.

Life After Hate (LAH) is the leader in the violence intervention community in the United States. LAH is dedicated to helping individuals disengage and deradicalize from violent far-right extremist (VFRE) hate groups and online spaces.

To support this mission, LAH provides intervention services at the individual, family, and local community levels in conjunction with public education initiatives to weaken the growth and impact of violent extremist groups. Life After Hate’s work assists individuals find pathways away from hate and ideologically-driven violence. 

Originally founded in 2011 by former violent extremists, today we are a growing team of community engagement leaders, mental health professionals, social workers, and Formers dedicated to helping individuals disengage from VFRE. This work is done through interventions, education, research and outreach.

Our Philosophy

Our crucial work in combating violent extremism is imperative to establish a safer and more resilient nation. Our clients come to us in various stages of disengagement from violent behavior; it can take months or years to completely disengage from VFRE and reintegrate into society. We assess and track progress at the individual level and aggregate data to identify trends, patterns and evidence to help measure our success. By interrupting violence committed to advance political, social, religious, or ideological beliefs, we are able to carry out our vision of moving toward a world that allows people to change and contribute to a society without violence. 

What We Do

The only way to send VFRE into retreat is to help individuals identify what they need to leave hate and violence behind. More directly, we need to reduce the magnitude of VFRE and make it more difficult for new members to be recruited.

To accomplish our mission, Life After Hate offers a portfolio of resources, including our direct services program, ExitUSA™, and a range of complementary education and community engagement initiatives designed to amplify the work and findings of ExitUSA™.

ExitUSA™ 

ExitUSA™ is an intervention program addressing violent far-right extremism in the United States for individuals who are already radicalized by providing disengagement services and support for women, men, and families.

ExitUSA™ provides case management, life skills training, and peer mentoring services to individuals who are or have been involved in VFRE. ExitUSA™ also provides case management, skills training, and a bi-weekly psychoeducational support group for families or friends with loved ones involved in the violent far-right. Case management includes a comprehensive assessment, collaborative goal setting, and systematic identification and coordination of referrals and resources. Peer mentors work with clients to change violent far-right extremist beliefs, behaviors, and social networks to promote reintegration into society. Our work with clients is labor intensive and many of our clients are high-need, meaning they may require years of services.

Outreach, Education, and Research

We work diligently to ensure our staff and external partners have the training they require to handle the intricacies of the population we serve. Ongoing outreach and education is provided to mental health practitioners and social service providers who work with the specific needs of our clients in the state where they reside. Education and consultation is available to referral partners that we are working closely with such as, law enforcement, probation officers, correctional personnel, and state and regional threat assessment teams. These partners are able to offer support to individuals involved in and/or contemplating disengagement from VFRE. Life After Hate partners with researchers to facilitate better understanding of reasons people join and exit VFRE, which informs the ongoing development and implementation of our services and furthers our mission.

Our January grantees thank you for your support

Each month, CREDO members vote on how we distribute funding to three incredible nonprofits. Those small actions add up – with one click, you can help fund groups supporting gender equality, LGBTQ rights, and women and children displaced by crisis. In January, CREDO members voted to distribute our monthly donation among Equal Rights Advocates, SAGE and Women’s Refugee Commission.

These donations are made possible by CREDO customers and the revenue they generate by using our services. The distribution depends entirely on the votes of CREDO members like you. And for that, our January grant recipients thank you.

 Equal Rights Advocates

“Thank you, CREDO supporters, for supporting gender equality and empowerment! Together, we can transform our communities into places where women, girls, and people of every gender identity have equal opportunities to lead and thrive.” – Noreen Farrell, Executive Director

To learn more, visit equalrights.org.

SAGE

“This funding will help SAGE build a long and fruitful future of helping and advocating for LGBTQ+ elders across the country. We are thrilled to support generations of elders to come with CREDO’s support.” – Michael Adams, Executive Director of SAGE

To learn more, visit sageusa.org.

Women’s Refugee Commission

“WRC breaks barriers for women, children, and others most at risk by working in partnership with those affected by conflict and crisis. Together, we ensure access to the services and opportunities necessary to rebuild their lives and thrive.” – Leila Rassekh Milani, JD. WRC Board of Directors; Program Director, Futures Without Violence

To learn more, visit https://www.womensrefugeecommission.org.

Now check out the three groups we are funding in February, and cast your vote to help distribute our donations.

CREDO members who use our products are the reason why we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.

Survey Results: Which issues are most important to CREDO members?

CREDO members like you power our progressive movement — and your priorities help keep us working harder to make our world a better place.

That’s why, last month, we polled our members about which issues matter most to you to improve our philanthropy and donations program — which now totals over $94 million donated since 1985.

The response was incredible — thousands of you made your voices heard! — and here are the results.

We just want to begin by saying thank you so much to everyone who took a few minutes to fill out this important survey and left us with some very kind words. Here are a few of the wonderful notes we received:

“​​I love that CREDO is involved in donating to causes that make life better for us all.”

“Thank you for your work in making a better world!”

“You do excellent work. I’m very grateful for the help you give to worthy causes.”

“I think you are doing wonderful work. I wish more businesses had a greater social conscience like yours.”

Okay, now onto the results:

First, we asked our members about their political identity, and the results weren’t too surprising — we are the nation’s only progressive mobile company, after all — with more than 76% of respondents saying they are either “progressive” or “liberal,” while nearly 9% said “socialist” and a little more than 11% saying “moderate.” Less than one percent identify as conservative.

Next, we asked whether and how you are politically active. Nearly everyone responded that they took part in some sort of political activity, including signing petitions (84%), talking to loved ones about important issues (72%), volunteering (32%) and working to register voters (11%).

Now, to the big question of the survey: which issues are most important to CREDO members? We know it was incredibly hard to narrow down your picks to just three (all are so important!), but our members overwhelmingly chose climate justice, followed by voting rights, civil rights and women’s rights.

Next, we wanted to know what most concerns our members. Again, climate change and voting rights nearly tied as the top two answers, followed by gun violence and attacks on reproductive rights.

Finally, we wanted to know if you were aware that we donate to three progressive nonprofits every month, and if you have ever voted to help us distribute our funds among the groups. The answer was a resounding YES! 

Again, thank you to everyone who shared their feedback with us to help strengthen our donations program. And speaking of which, if you haven’t yet cast your ballot this month for one, two or all three amazing groups, head over to CREDODonations.com and vote today!

Vote for Democracy Now!, Evergreen Action and Life After Hate

Every month, CREDO members vote to distribute our monthly grant to three incredible progressive causes – and every vote makes a difference. This February, you can support independent journalism, climate justice, and the fight against violent right-wing extremism by voting to fund Democracy Now!, Evergreen Action and Life After Hate.

 Democracy Now!

Democracy Now! is a daily, independent news hour hosted by award-winning journalists Amy Goodman and Juan González. Their reporting includes breaking news headlines and in-depth interviews with people on the frontlines of today’s most pressing issues.

Funding from CREDO members would help Democracy Now! produce its independent news hour, bringing tens of millions of people critical information about war and peace, threats to democracy, the climate crisis, abortion rights, gun control and more.

Evergreen Action

Evergreen pairs bold policy products with campaign-style communications and advocacy tactics to drive positive change. The organization fights for a just and thriving clean energy economy through raising standards, catalyzing investment, and centering justice.

Funding from CREDO members will help Evergreen engage directly with federal and state officials to pass and implement ambitious climate policies to defeat the climate crisis and build a thriving, just and inclusive clean energy future.

Life After Hate

Life After Hate helps individuals disengage and deradicalize from violent far-right extremist (VFRE) hate groups and hateful online spaces.

Funding from CREDO members will help its crucial work to combat violent extremism. By interrupting violence committed to advance extremist beliefs, the organization can move toward a world that allows people to change and contribute to a society without violence.

Your vote this month will determine how we divide our monthly donations among these three progressive groups. Be sure to cast your vote to support one, two or all three by February 28.

CREDO members who use our products and services everyday are the reason we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile and join our movement.

How to set up parental controls on your smartphone

Did you finally give in and purchase a new phone for a young person in your family — and you’re a little nervous about it?

We get it. There’s a lot of questionable content on the Internet, and there are real concerns about the social, emotional and educational issues that arise from excessive screen time.

The good thing is that there are tools that allow parents and caregivers to set boundaries and parental controls as your children test out their first phone. Here’s how to get started.

Set up Parental Controls on iPhone

On Apple devices, we recommend that you first set up Family Sharing so that you can manage your child’s screen time, purchases and other actions from your device. With Family Sharing, you can share subscriptions and locations, limit purchases, and of course, set up parental controls.

  • To set up Family Sharing, go to Settings > > [your name] > Family Sharing, then follow the instructions to set it up.
  • You can now add a family member to your family group. You may also need to create an Apple ID. Here’s how.

Now, you can set up parental controls. To set up Screen Time for a member of your family:

  • Go to Settings > > [your name] > Family Sharing > Screen Time.
  • Tap the child you want to set up Screen Time for.
  • Tap Screen Time, then follow the onscreen instructions.

You can now go to your child’s device to set up Screen Time, safety, communications, content and privacy settings. Here’s a detailed explainer from Apple to adjust these settings.

Set up Parental Controls on Android

Like Apple devices, you can use the Family Link app on Android devices as a central place to control parental controls. This will allow you to create an account for your child, manage your child’s screen time and apps, know their location, and restrict access to certain content. Here’s how to get started:

  • Download and install Family Link.
  • Open the app on your device and follow the on screen instructions to get started.
  • To begin managing the parental controls on your child’s device, follow these steps from Google to limit screen time, allow or block apps, and find their location. You will need access to your child’s device to complete the steps.

For additional information and troubleshooting, browse this help guide from Google.

New phone? Here’s how to transfer your data from your old phone to your new one

Did you or a loved one get a brand new mobile phone over the holidays — but you’re still not sure how to transfer your apps, photos, files, settings and everything else from your old phone to your new one?

Don’t worry, we’ve got you covered! Transferring your data to a new phone may seem daunting, but it’s incredibly easy once you get started, if you follow these simple tips.

 

Moving data from your old iPhone to a new iPhone

With the introduction of iOS 15, Apple has made transferring data to a new iPhone even easier than before, with a new feature called “Prepare for New iPhone.” This feature gives you free temporary cloud storage space for 21 days from when you initiate the transfer, so you have extra space to move all of your photos, videos, data and settings if you don’t have enough cloud storage space available under your current plan. To initiate:

  • Go to Settings > General > Transfer or Reset iPhone
  • Tap Get Started > Continue
  • It may then ask you to tap Turn on Backup to Transfer if iCloud backup isn’t already running.
  • If you haven’t backed up your iPhone to iCloud recently, this process may take a while but you can come back to check the status before proceeding to the next steps

Now, to transfer your data to your new iPhone, you will need to use “Quick Start.” Here’s how: 

Before you start:

  1. Have your Apple ID and password ready.
  2. If you have an Apple Watch, unpair it from your old phone.

Transfer your data (courtesy of Apple)

  1. Choose a time when you will not need to use both your old and new devices. The process may take a little while.
  2. Make sure that your current device is connected to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth is on. Turn on your new device and place it near your current device. Follow the onscreen instructions to get started. If the prompt to set up your new device disappears from your current device, restart both devices.
  3. Connect your device to Wi-Fi or your device’s cellular network.
  4. You might be asked to activate your cellular service.
  5. Set up Face ID or Touch ID.
  6. Choose how you want to transfer your data.
    1. If you download from iCloud, your apps and data download in the background so that you can start using your new device right away.
    2. If you transfer directly from your previous device, you’ll need to wait for the transfer to complete on both devices before you can use them.
  7. Keep your devices near each other and plugged in to power until the data migration process is complete. Transfer times can vary based on factors such as network conditions and the amount of data being transferred.

Moving data from your old Android device to a new one

Transferring your important information between two Android devices is just as simple. Here’s how to transfer your data from an older Android phone a newer one (courtesy of Google):

Before you begin:

  1. Charge both devices.
  2. Make sure you can unlock the old device with a PIN, pattern, or password.
  3. On your old device, Sign in with your Google Account.
  4. Backup your data. 
  5. Ensure your device is connected to a Wi-Fi network.

Now, transfer your data:

  1. Turn on your new device.
  2. Tap Start. If “Start” doesn’t display, you can copy your data manually.
  3. When asked, make sure you connect to a Wi-Fi network.
  4. Choose to copy apps and data from your old device.
    • If you have a cable to connect your devices, follow the on-screen instructions to copy your data.
    • If you don’t have a cable:
      • Tap No cable? Ok.
      • Tap A backup from an Android phone.
      • To copy your data, follow the on-screen instructions.

How to transfer your data from iOS to Android — or Android to iOS

Some new and existing CREDO members sometimes make the switch from Android to a new iPhone, or vice-versa. While transferring data to a new operating system isn’t difficult, it does involve a few extra steps.

That’s why we have a separate blog post to walk you through this painless migration. Check out our previous post “How to migrate your phone’s data from Android to Apple iOS — and back.”