The daily newsletter to dismantle white supremacy.

3 years.

300,000 subscribers.

$3M donated to racial equity groups.

Founded by entrepreneur, author and magician Nicole Cardoza, the Anti-Racism Daily has scaled to a trusted platform providing targeted, tangible ways for readers across the country to rally for racial equity.

Fully funded by reader contributions, the newsletter has created a powerful and lasting mark on conversations on race, gender, class and other socioeconomic inequities.

Since our launch, our readers have…

  • Petitioned to have Confederate statues removed from their city centers.

  • Rallied other parents to help change the name of their child's school to a less offensive name.

  • Started anti-racism coalitions in their workplaces and universities.

“Time and time again, I print out the newsletter and take it to my mom, who’s 92 years old. As someone who’s in the trenches with justice and equity work every single day, it’s so heartening to know that other people out there have that fire in their belly just as much as I do.”

Dr. Linda Solis, Ph.D. in leadership studies

Read Linda’s Story >

“Through the ARD prompting us to broaden our resources and our visions, we can see, are valuing, and are actually doing research that is more community-grounded and, in some cases, ceding power to community partners. We have more humility. We have more partnership. We have the ability to be closer partners with our community, and it turns around research.”

Dr. David Parker, Researcher

Read David’s Story >

“The ARD helped me develop a stronger point of view, find the words to talk about issues, and stand strong during conversations with folks when there are microaggressions, blatant biases, racist comments. The ARD helped me develop strength in being able to stand up and push back.”

Megan McClendon, Design Consultant

Read Megan’s Story >

“The reading I’m doing to educate myself, I want to pass it on to other people. I work as an educator, so this really resonated with me. Education is a crucial piece in trying to change society. It won’t happen without educating people. What’s important is having a shared history.”

Sabine Won, Activist

Read Sabine’s Story >