Simon Wiesenthal Center Garret started working with the
Simon Wiesenthal Center in fall 2018, travelling to conferences, campuses to speak to students about the effects of hate and racism and the opportunities for engagement and community building. and runs an American bases EXIT program under the umbrella of C.H.A.N.G.E. Garret is developing his own EXIT program, which includes the Erasing the Hate tattoo removal campaign, participation in community events, counseling and therapy sessions, and visits to places like the
National Civil Rights Museum and the Withers Collection Museum and Gallery, both located in Memphis. Since November 2019 he is also a staff member at
Parents for Peace, a non-governmental public health nonprofit organization that works to counter extremism.
C.H.A.N.G.E. After the fatal confrontation between law enforcement and
Alton Sterling in Louisiana in 2016 kicked off a series of events, Garret decided to start the non-profit organization C.H.A.N.G.E Inc., which engages in community outreach programs, food drives, seminars, anti-racism campaigns and anti-violence campaigns. C.H.A.N.G.E stands for Care, Hope, Awareness, Need, Give and Education. The organization holds recurring events in high-poverty areas and supports black communities.
Tattoo covering In August 2017, Garret partnered with artists working at Sick Side Tattoo & Body Piercing Studio in
Horn Lake, Mississippi (Memphis Metro Area). Together they work to cover up racist and gang-related tattoos through the Erase the Hate campaign. Soon, other tattoo parlors joined the campaign and offer to cover up racist and gang related tattoos for free. The service is currently available in Horn Lake, Mississippi, Memphis, Tennessee, Jacksonville, Florida, and Los Angeles, California. The campaign was featured in the short film
Rewired, a documentary by the Chapman University about Garret, local news outlets German national television show Galileo and other international formats.
hateXchange Together with other activists and members of
Exit Deutschland, Garret developed HateXchange, the official counterpart to EXIT Deutschland's award-winning program named Hass Hilft (Donate the Hate), where residents and sponsors turn neo-Nazi marches into "involuntary walk-a-thons" by raising money for an anti-extremist organization. Besides "walk-a-thons" and "park-a-thons" as on November 10, 2017 in Charleston, South Carolina, donations are also involuntarily raised by hate comments on social media. $1 per collected comment is donated to non-profit organizations like
Life After Hate,
Human Rights Watch, the
Southern Poverty Law Center and selected local non-profits.
Memphis Peace Conference He is also the founder and organizer of the annual Memphis Peace Conference, which includes an inter-faith and a community panel and was first held at Withers Collection Museum and Gallery in Memphis on September 29, 2018. ==Other activities==