Download your Climate Strike posters here

This September, people across the nation and the world will take to the streets to participate in the Global Climate Strikes, a massive, week-long, youth-led event to demand climate justice for everyone and end the age of fossil fuels.

Here at CREDO, we’ll be marching alongside young people across the country on Sept. 20 to demand climate action – and we hope you will join us! 

We’ve created some great posters to download, print and take with you to the marches happening all across the country. And if you haven’t yet committed to attending, click here to RSVP or to organize a Climate Strike in your area.

Download “Strike for Climate Action”

Download “Our House is on Fire”

Download “Another _ Against Fossil Fuels”

Download “Green New Deal Now!”

CREDO Tip: How to participate in the Global Climate Strike

The climate crisis is worse than we ever thought, and we have a little over a decade to drastically transform our economy and reduce carbon emissions to ensure we leave the next generation with a habitable Earth.

That’s why here at CREDO, we are doing everything we can to slow the climate crisis, including participating in the Global Climate Strikes – a massive, week-long, youth-led event to demand climate justice for everyone and end the age of fossil fuels. 

This Sept. 20, people all around the world – including the staff at CREDO offices across the country – will walk out of our workplaces and homes to join young climate strikers in the streets at thousands of marches and demand an end to the age of fossil fuels. 

We urge you to join us for the Global Climate Strikes, too. Here are some ways you can get involved.

Here are 4 ways you can join the Global Climate Strike. 

1.  Join the Global Climate Strike.

In 2018, Greta Thunberg started a single-person strike on the steps of the Swedish Parliament House. That strike went viral

Young people united in solidarity and led the way for climate justice by striking from school every Friday. The hashtags #FridaysforFuture and #ClimateStrike are now the rallying cries of millions. The message is simple: If not you, then who? If not now, then when? 

On Sept. 20, three days before the U.N. Climate Summit in NYC, young people and adults will strike all across the United States and world to demand transformative action to address the climate crisis

To find a Climate Strike year you, visit the Global Climate Strike website.

2.  Help CREDO decide how to allocate funds to groups fighting for climate justice.

Every month, CREDO gives to progressive causes – $1 million a year and more than $94 million to date. 

This month, CREDO is donating an additional $50,000 to five groups fighting for climate justice and the Green New Deal. But we need your help! 

Click here to cast your vote and help us distribute donations to five groups fighting the climate crisis.

3. Spread the word

Messages are only powerful if people hear them. Support the cause by helping to spread the word! Tell everyone – your friends, family, co-workers, classmates, teammates and adversaries – because as Greta said, “Everyone should mobilize for the 20th-27th of September because this is a global issue which actually affects everyone.”

There are plenty of free resources online that will help you spread the word at the Global Climate Strike and Strike with Us websites. 

On social media, be sure to use the hashtags #StrikeWithUs and #ClimateStrike and check out CREDO’s Facebook and Twitter accounts for great content to share leading up to and during the Climate Strikes.

Our allies at 350.org also have additional resources to help you share your story about why you’re participating in the Climate Strikes. You can find those here.

4. Organize a group in your community.

This year the Global Climate Strikers have made organizing easier than ever by providing both workplace and community organization and action plans. 

  • For workplace organizing and action plans, click here
  • For community organizing and action plans, click here

Use these action plans to activate your networks. Think of the organizations, clubs or faith groups you belong to. Maybe you’re in a dinner club or a book club? Talk about the climate strikes at your next meeting. Are you a teacher? Organize faculty and encourage your students to participate.

In the days leading up to Global Climate Strikes, organize a poster day. Creating your strike day materials together is a great way to activate your community. 

If you don’t want to create your own poster, we have some great posters for you to download, print out and take with you to the marches.

We hope to see you on the streets on Sept. 20! To RSVP for a Climate Strike near you, please visit the Climate Strike website here.

Victory: Yosemite keeps historic names

Thanks in part to more than 143,000 CREDO members who signed our petition, the names of historic locations at Yosemite National Park will be restored to their well-known names, including the Wawona Hotel, Curry Village, the Ahwahnee Hotel and Badger Pass.

Jeremy Jacobs, a billionaire Trump donor and the chairman of the concessions company Delaware North that recently lost its $2 billion contract in Yosemite, sued the NPS for tens of millions of dollars to turn over naming rights of two iconic landmarks in the park, the Wawona and Ahwahnee Hotels. The NPS recently settled the lawsuit that restored the original names to these historic locations.

Thank you to CREDO members like you who stood up for these beloved American landmarks.

Our August 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 progressive labor policies, making our government more inclusive and representative, and fighting to protect our environment. In August, over 61,000 CREDO members voted to distribute our monthly donation to Democracy for America, National Day Laborer Organizing Network and Rainforest Action Network.

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 August grant recipients thank you.

Democracy for America
$54,158

“Thank you CREDO members for being essential allies in our fight to build a country and a Democratic Party that’s unflinchingly committed to an inclusive populist political agenda up-and-down the ballot in all 50 states.” – Charles Chamberlain, Democracy for America

To learn more, visit www.democracyforamerica.com.

National Day Laborer Organizing Network
$35,416

“Thank you for standing with NDLON at a time when your support is very needed! CREDO members like you make an impact on the communities, programs and member organizations we serve.” – Pablo Alvarado, Co-Executive Director, National Day Laborer Organizing Network 

To learn more, visit www.ndlon.org.  

Rainforest Action Network
$60,425

“Thank you for supporting Rainforest Action Network! CREDO members like you further RAN’s mission to protect people and the planet by addressing the root causes of climate change, deforestation and exploitation within extractive industries.” – Lindsey Allen, Executive Director, Rainforest Action Network

To learn more, visit www.RAN.org 

Now check out the three groups we are funding in September, 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.

Vote for Center for Constitutional Rights, Detention Watch Network and March for Our Lives this September

Every month, CREDO members vote to distribute our monthly donation to three incredible progressive causes – and every vote makes a difference. This September, you can support groups fighting for social justice, immigrant rights and gun control by voting to fund the Center for Constitutional Rights, Detention Watch Network and March for Our Lives.

Center for Constitutional Rights

The Center for Constitutional Rights works with communities under threat to fight for justice and liberation through litigation, advocacy and strategic communications. The organization fights for a world without oppression – where people use their power to achieve justice and guarantee the rights of all.

Funding from CREDO members will help the Center for Constitutional Rights deploy litigation and advocacy in support of social justice movements fighting structural racism, gender oppression, economic inequity and governmental abuses of power.

Detention Watch Network

Detention Watch Network is a national coalition building power through collective advocacy, grassroots organizing and strategic communications to abolish immigration detention in the United States. DWN fights for a world without immigration detention where every individual lives freely. 

Support from CREDO will increase DWN’s capacity to fight against the attempted mass expansion of detention through our #DefundHate and #CommunitiesnotCages campaigns and supporting our grassroots organizational members with small sub-grants.

March for Our Lives

March for Our Lives harnesses the power of young people to fight for life-saving gun safety measures. After organizing the largest single-day protest against gun violence in history, MFOL is continuing the fight for safe communities by mobilizing young people against the complacency and inaction that’s created America’s gun violence epidemic.

Support from CREDO members will significantly increase MFOL’s capacity to register and mobilize voters, help grow and support our local MFOL chapters nationwide and enable it to continue building the infrastructure of the organization.

Your vote this month will determine how we divide our monthly donation among these three progressive groups. Be sure to cast your vote to support one, two or all three by Sep. 30.

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

CREDO activists confront Nancy Pelosi: #WeCantWait to impeach Trump

8/21/2019 – San Francisco, Calif., USA: Thais Marques, with Credo, yells and holds a banner reading, “We Can’t Wait,” as Nancy Pelosi received a lifetime achievement award from the San Francisco Democratic Party at the Intercontinental Hotel in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, August 21, 2019. There were a large number of groups picketing outside and several protesters managed to get into the event to urge her to launch impeachment proceedings. (Carlos Avila Gonzalez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris)

Last week, I confronted Speaker Nancy Pelosi in San Francisco to demand that she use her power to impeach Donald Trump now.

Speaker Pelosi was receiving a lifetime achievement award at the San Francisco Democratic Party’s “Heart of the Resistance” dinner. While more than 100 activists from CREDO, By the People, CAIR, Courage Campaign, Mujeres Unidas y Activas, Need to Impeach and other groups rallied outside of the event, I confronted Speaker Pelosi inside of it.

I told her: “Speaker Pelosi, I am undocumented. My community is being targeted by ICE and killed by white supremacists. Fight for my community, and impeach Trump now. We can’t wait.”

 

I confronted Speaker Pelosi to let her know that my people, who are being killed by Trump’s white supremacy, cannot wait any longer for her moral leadership on impeachment. I expected her and the other attendees to at least hear me out, but I literally screamed into a void of privilege, complacency and denial. Pelosi’s refusal to hear me speaks volumes about the limits of today’s Democratic Party, which congratulates itself on hating Trump but is unwilling to act to rein him in.

Our communities cannot afford to wait any longer. We need Speaker Pelosi to lead by publicly supporting impeachment and setting a date for a vote in the House of Representatives. And we’re not letting up until she meets our demands.

Outside the award ceremony, my colleague CREDO Action Campaign Director Nicole Regalado made an impassioned case that Speaker Pelosi will not leave a legacy of resistance, but a legacy of failure if she does not act now to impeach Trump.

Thanks to CREDO members who support our work, our protest received widespread media coverage, including NBC, the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Francisco Examiner, Democracy Now!, Common Dreams and The Young Turks.

At CREDO, we know that fighting for progressive values and the world we all deserve means having the courage to hold Democrats accountable when they fall short. Thank you for sticking with us and having our backs. You can watch the entire livestream of the protest here.

AT&T and Breitbart: Making money from white supremacy together

AT&T has no problem turning a profit from white supremacy and hate speech.

New reporting reveals that AT&T’s digital advertising platform recently restored services to Breitbart, the white supremacist, misogynistic, fake news media outlet formerly run by Steve Bannon that helped fuel Donald Trump’s rise to power.

While Breitbart has lost thousands of advertisers and 90% of its ad revenue thanks to the incredible work of groups like Sleeping Giants and the activism of CREDO members and our progressive allies, AT&T sees an opportunity to partner with a racist, misogynistic, neo-Nazi hate site to make money.

Shortly after the 2016 election, AppNexus, one of the largest advertising exchanges serving digital publishers, took a principled stand and dropped Breitbart from its platform, citing Breitbart’s bigotry and racism. After AT&T’s acquisition of AppNexus, Breitbart urged AT&T to reinstate its hate speech outlet on the advertising platform, and after review, “AT&T concluded that Breitbart complied with its content guidelines.” 

This is yet another in a long line of examples of AT&T getting into bed with the extreme right-wing to cash in:

At CREDO, we will never align ourselves with right-wing hate. In fact, our members choose us because we are fighting every day for the progressive values they believe in. Each month, we donate to progressive groups, like Planned Parenthood, the ACLU and Detention Watch Network, and we fund an incredible team of activists organizing around issues like civil rights, climate justice and economic equality.

If you’d like to join the mobile company that shares your values, please visit CREDO Mobile to make the switch today.

6 National Parks to Visit This Fall

When is the best time to visit a national park? The answer: Fall. Once school is back in session and summer vacation is over, national parks become some of the best places to travel to. Not only have the crowds thinned out, but the weather tends to be more temperate, and costs for lodging, flights and car rentals drop as well.

All practicalities aside, the best reason to visit during the fall is of course for the scenery. Trees like maples, aspens, cottonwoods, oaks and dogwoods transform the landscape from shades of green to vibrant colors of red, yellow and orange.

Below, we’ve listed our top six national parks to visit this fall, but don’t worry if none of these are near you. The National Park Service has 61 designated national parks throughout the country. Click here to find one near you.

Blue Ridge Parkway, Virginia and North Carolina

Blue Ridge Parkway is a 469-mile stretch of road that runs through Virginia and North Carolina and coined America’s Favorite Drive by the National Park Service. With speed limits of 45 mph – and sometimes even slower – this scenic drive includes long-range vistas and up-close views of the rugged Appalachian Mountains.

Along the Blue Ridge Parkway you will find Mount Mitchell, the highest mountain peak in the eastern United States, Linville Gorge, the deepest gorge east of the Grand Canyon, Whitewater Falls, the highest waterfall east of the Rockies, and abundant biodiversity.

Pro tip: You can explore the area a variety of different ways like driving, camping, biking, hiking and RVing. Here’s a perfect 3-day itinerary.

56 Roanoke River Pkwy., Roanoke, VA 24014. Plan your visit.

Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado 

If you love Aspen trees, the Rocky Mountains are going to rock your world. At higher elevations, the peak of fall colors known locally as the “gold rush” usually begins in late September and makes its way down to lower elevations in October.

The four best places to catch the changing colors here are Bear Lake Road, the Peak to Peak National Scenic Byway, the Cache la Poudre National Scenic Byway and the Colorado River Headwaters National Scenic Byway.

Pro tip: Fall colors aside, the Rocky Mountains are known for fantastic wildlife, including grazing elk, which can be seen at Horseshoe Meadow during dawn and dusk.

1000 Hwy. 36, Estes Park, CO 80517-8397. Plan your visit.

Mt. Rainier National Park, Washington

No trip to Washington is complete without a visit to Mt. Rainier, but missing the incredible colors that emerge during the fall would be a downright travesty. Don’t believe me? Check out the live National Park Service webcams!

At a striking 14,410 feet above sea level, Mt. Rainer is an active volcano with glaciated peaks that spawn five major rivers and over 100 waterfalls. For the coveted and spectacular fall colors, head to Reflection Lakes, where the mirrored water creates twice the abundance of red, yellow, green and orange.

Pro tip: Whether you have one day or four days, Mt. Rainier has plenty to see. Check here for recommended itineraries.

70002 SR Hwy. 410 E, Enumclaw, WA 98022. Plan your visit.

Zion National Park, Utah

Situated in southern Utah, Zion National Park is home to massive sandstone cliffs that range in color from cream to pink to red! During the fall, Zion National Park is like a painting come to life. The reds are bright, the yellows are golden-mustard and the oranges pop against the landscape.

Zion’s 146,597 acres of pure heaven can seem daunting to navigate, but the shuttle system makes getting around super easy. There are only two lines, the first is the Springdale Shuttle, which has nine stops in the town of Springdale. The second is the Zion Canyon Loop Shuttle that has 10 stops beginning in Zion Canyon Village and ending at the Temple of Sinawava.

Whether you have three days or just a few hours, Zion during the fall will leave you in awe of nature’s majesty.

Pro tip: Get there early because parking is limited and fills up quickly. And if you only have time to see one thing, make sure it’s the Narrows. To get there, take the Zion Canyon Shuttle to the very last stop (Temple of Sinawava), walk one mile along the paved path and prepare to step into another world.

1101 Zion – Mount Carmel Hwy., Hurricane, UT 84737. Plan your visit.

Cuyahoga Valley National Park, Ohio

Cuyahoga Valley is most famous for the 1969 Cuyahoga River Fire, which galvanized the environmental movement leading to the first Earth Day, the EPA’s establishment and the passage of the Clean Water Act.

As we have over 61 national parks, Cuyahoga Valley National Park rarely makes the top lists, but it earns a place here because the autumnal colors are out of this world. As native broad-leaf trees, which are influenced by the annual photoperiod (amount of daily sunlight) begin to see less sunlight, a transformation occurs. The weather turns cool, the nights become crisp and as a result, the sugar and red maple trees splash the park in red, yellow and orange colors.

Pro tip: The best place to find fall colors is at Brandywine Falls. The 65-foot falls are the embodiment of its name with cascading water dropping over rocks like wine spilling over tiered glasses. At the boardwalk, look closely at the Berea Sandstone. Careful inspection will reveal granules of sand dating back as far as 320 million years ago.

15610 Vaughn Rd., Brecksville, OH. Plan your visit.

Acadia National Park, Maine

Known as the crown jewel of the North Atlantic coast, Acadia National Park in Maine is one of the top 10 most visited parks in the United States. Established in 1916, Acadia National Park is 49,052 acres of woods that roll on down to meet with the Atlantic Ocean. As the easternmost territory in the United States, Acadia is also one of the first places to catch the sunrise.

As for those bright fall colors, look no further than Park Loop Road, a 27-mile stretch that begins at the Hulls Cove Visitor Center and connects to lakes, mountains, forests and the famous rocky coast.

Pro tip: Skip the stress of traffic and limited parking by using the free Acadia Shuttles.

25 Visitor Center Rd., Bar Harbor, ME 04609. Plan your visit.

Whether you’re the type to stroll idly through nature and gently observe its natural wonders or the type to seek out the highest peak and hike your way to the top, each of these national treasures has an abundance of things to do and see.

Today – August 22 – is the day Black women’s wages finally catch up

The wage gap between women and men in the United States is persistent and unacceptable. 

Women in the United States today still make $500,000 to $1.2 million dollars less than their male co-workers over the course of their lifetimes. On average, women make only 80 cents for every dollar a man makes. 

Every year, advocates, politicians and the media draw attention to Equal Pay Day. Equal Pay Day highlights how many days into the new year women must work in order to catch up to their male counterparts. In 2019, that day fell on April 2.

Unfortunately, April’s Equal Pay Day tells an incomplete story because it looks at women in general. When you disaggregate for race, we can see that the disparity is even greater for women of color, who are paid significantly less than their white counterparts. The truth is that Black women only make 61 cents and Latinas only 53 cents for each dollar made by a white man.

In fact, today – August 22, 2019 – is Equal Pay Day for Black women, the day that their wages catch up to white, non-hispanic men who do the same work. Let that sink in for a minute: it takes more than eight months for Black women’s wages to catch up to their white, male co-workers. And more than four months for their wages to catch up to their white female co-workers. Latina women on average won’t catch up till they’ve worked almost an entire extra year!

That’s why, today at CREDO, we want to recognize August 22 as another Equal Pay Day and call attention to the women of color who are paid far less than white men and white women.

While the Trump administration, Republicans in Congress and corporate America continue to fight pay equity, CREDO and our members will continue to fight for equality and lift up the voices of women who deserve equal pay.

CREDO Tip: 6 ways to protect your privacy on public WiFi

Using public WiFi – at a cafe, the airport or a hotel lobby – is a free and easy way to get online (and save your mobile data) when you’re not at home or work. You can play games, watch videos or read the news.

But any activity that involves more personal information – like checking your email or viewing your bank account – can put you at risk of privacy invasion or identity theft.

To protect yourself when you log onto a public WiFi hotspot, here are six steps you can take. 

1. Don’t access any sensitive data on a public WiFi connection

Don’t log into your bank’s website and check your balance when you’re at the airport cafe. Don’t go to your credit card’s website to pay your bill when you’re in the hotel lobby. Don’t shop online. The risk is not worth the convenience.

2. Use a VPN

A VPN (virtual private network) provides a secure channel for all the information traveling back and forth from your device. It’s by far the best way to ensure privacy on a public WiFi network.

When you use a VPN app on your phone or computer, you don’t connect directly to the websites you visit, you connect first to the VPN’s servers, which routes you to the sites. Your communication is secured with a variety of encryption technologies, so no one can see your online activity.

Of course, the VPN provider can see your activity, so you should look for a VPN app with a no-logging policy, which means that the provider won’t store a record of what you do online. You should also look for a VPN that charges for its service (most are around $10 a month). VPNs are expensive to operate, and you don’t know how free VPNs support themselves – maybe they do it by selling your data.

A VPN is easy to use. Just switch it on, and it will secure all your internet activity on your device, whether you’re using a web browser or an internet-connected app like Facebook.

Here is CNET’s 2019 list of 10 good VPN apps for your phone. All of them charge a monthly fee.

You can also read about some VPN recommendations on our previous blog post 3 Ways to Boost Your Privacy on an Android Phone.

3. Watch out for fake WiFi networks

Only use WiFi networks that are operated by the location you’re visiting. Be alert to and avoid networks that have names similar to legitimate networks, like “Free Airport WiFi” or “Public WiFi.” Ask an employee the name of the location’s network and use that one.

If you connect to one of these “honeypots,” as they’re known, everything you do online can be monitored by the person who set up the fake network. These networks can also be used to distribute malware, which is a threat to your personal information.

One red flag is a very slow public WiFi network. There’s a chance the network is slow because it’s fake. You haven’t connected to the legitimate WiFi router or you’ve connected to a device that’s posing as the legitimate router. The speed is slow because your data is being routed through that device, which is skimming your data as it passes through.

4. Enable two-factor authentication

If you do visit websites that require a password – your banking site or any other site that holds your private information – enable two-factor authentication (2FA) if the site offers it. In fact, you should probably enable two-factor authentication on most sites that offer it, like your bank, social media accounts and email provider.

In addition to your password, 2FA requires that a second element be entered before you can log into a site. For example, if you enable 2FA on your bank’s site, your bank will email you a code or text one to your phone that you’ll enter to complete your log in.

If you use 2FA, hackers can’t log into your bank account or credit card account even if they do manage to steal your password. In turn, you can be sure you’re dealing with a legitimate website, not a fake site, because you’ve received your code.

5. Keep your OS up to date

Operating system updates deliver new features to your phone but they also deliver new security measures that protect you from cybercrime.

Yes, it can take time to install these updates. But don’t postpone them for too long. You may place yourself at risk. When your Android or iPhone notifies you that an update is available, install it as soon as you can.

6. Avoid sites that don’t use encryption

Public WiFi is more secure than it used to be because encryption is now widespread on the internet. Google, for example, says almost 95% of traffic on its Chrome browser is encrypted. That little padlock icon and the “https” you see in front of most URLs means any data sent between you and the websites you visit is protected from malicious actors.

But this doesn’t mean you’re always safe. Some older mobile devices don’t support encryption. Even on a modern mobile device, it’s often hard to see if a URL is accompanied by “https” – or impossible, since many apps don’t display URLs at all.

And although the majority of websites are now encrypted, many still are not, even popular sites. Google reports that of the busiest 100 non-Google sites on the internet, which account for around a quarter of all website traffic worldwide, only 90 default to HTTPS encryption.