December Donations

It’s time for your purchase to go even further!

For any audit or launch 1:1 package or course purchased during the month of December 2021, I will donate 25% of the purchase price to your choice of one of the five charities listed below.

Just purchase the or 1:1 package as usual, and I’ll personally follow up to see which charity you would like the donation to be made to in your honor.

 

The Charities

The Trevor Project

The Trevor Project is one of the few organizations with a focus on real-time crisis interventions. Established to be a lifeline for any LGBTQ+ youth under the age of 25, The Trevor Project uses lifelines, chats, and texts to make sure whoever is calling/messaging/texting is okay. According to their website, donations help …

  • Provide crisis services free of charge and 24/7 — including TrevorLifeline, TrevorText, and TrevorChat

  • Expand our digital crisis services to reach more young people

  • Train a record number of volunteers

  • Enable our work with policymakers to pass legislation protecting young LGBTQ people

To learn more about The Trevor Project, click here.

 

Color of Change

Color Of Change is the nation’s largest online racial justice organization.

They help people respond effectively to injustice in the world around us. As a national online force driven by 7 million members, they move decision-makers in corporations and government to create a more human and less hostile world for Black people in America.

Their campaigns and initiatives win changes that matter. By designing strategies powerful enough to fight racism and injustice—in politics and culture, in the work place and the economy, in criminal justice and community life, and wherever they exist—they are changing both the written and unwritten rules of society. They mobilize their members to end practices and systems that unfairly hold Black people back, and champion solutions that move us all forward.

Until justice is real.

To learn more about Color of Change, click here.

 

Animal Welfare Institute

The Animal Welfare Institute started in 1951 to rescue animals from experimental laboratories. Today, they are still mainly involved in limiting animal research and education and advocacy nonprofit. They also provide information and ways for their supporters to make a change in their community.

Their support for a 3Rs approach with alternatives to animal research includes the belief that companies can:

  • Replace animals in research volunteers and advocates to save thousands of lives.

  • Reduce the number of animals being studies

  • Refine the care and treatment of animals being used for testing and education.

The Animal Welfare Institute was integral in the passing of the Animal Welfare Act in 1966. They continue to fight for strict adherence to that law.

According to their website, they “seek better treatment of animals everywhere—in the laboratory, on the farm, in commerce, at home, and in the wild.”

To learn more about the Animal Welfare Institute, click here.

 

Clean Air Task Force

Since its founding 25 years ago, the Clean Air Task Force (CATF) has worked to curb air pollution in all its forms through regulation at the US state and federal levels. It successfully campaigned to reduce the pollution caused by coal-fired power plants; helped establish regulations of diesel, shipping, and methane emissions; and worked to limit the power sector’s CO2 emissions. CATF also advocates for the adoption of innovative, neglected low- and zero-carbon technologies, from advanced nuclear power to super-hot rock geothermal energy.

To learn more about the Clean Air Task Force, click here.

 

National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center

The National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center, Inc. (NIWRC) is a Native-led nonprofit organization dedicated to ending violence against Native women and children. The NIWRC provides national leadership in ending gender-based violence in tribal communities by lifting up the collective voices of grassroots advocates and offering culturally grounded resources, technical assistance and training, and policy development to strengthen tribal sovereignty. Our staff and board of directors consist of Native women from throughout the United States with extensive experience and commitment to ending violence against Native women and their children. NIWRC's staff bring decades of expertise in building the grassroots movement to increase tribal responses to domestic violence and increase safety for Native women.

To learn more about the NatioNational Indigenous Women’s Resource Center, click here.