Apple CEO Tim Cook has said he developed his "moral sense" growing up in rural Alabama in the '60s and '70s - a period of incredible social upheaval.
Today, at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California, Cook keeps in his office photos of two men who pushed the South to change: Robert F. Kennedy and Martin L. King Jr. In recent years, Cook appears to have been inspired by Kennedy and King as he pushed for the South to change again, this time on the issue of gay rights.
Cook, who publicly acknowledged he was gay two years ago, has advocated for changing laws in states such as Alabama, where employees can be fired for being gay. He also has criticized states with "religious freedom" laws that seemed designed to sanction some forms of discrimination.
The line connecting Cook's youth with his current stance on gay rights seems obvious - especially to some of the people who know Cook. Yet Cook dismisses the idea that his upbringing influenced his views on privacy, which grabbed headlines earlier this year when Apple refused to help the FBI crack the passcode-locked iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino terrorists.
In an exclusive interview with The Post's Jena McGregor, Cook insisted there were other sources for his views on privacy: