Apple CEO Tim Cook skewered recent religious freedom laws that critics say make discrimination legal in a Washington Post Op-Ed on Monday, calling the Indiana law and others like it “dangerous” and “pro-discrimination.”
“These bills rationalize injustice by pretending to defend something many of us hold dear. They go against the very principles our nation was founded on, and they have the potential to undo decades of progress toward greater equality,” he wrote of Indiana Senate Bill 101, known as the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which was signed into law last Thursday. Many argue that the law is disguised to give the right to discriminate against LGBT people on religious grounds; supporters say it simply protects peoples religious beliefs and prohibits government intrusion.
Cook, who came out publicly as gay last year, is the latest public figure to condemn the Indiana law and the 19 others like it around the country that protect religious freedom, but open the door for serious discrimination, particularly against LGBT people.
Related: Pence defends religious freedom law: ‘Absolutely not’ a mistake
Cook recounts his own faith and compares anti-gay discrimination to racism in the South in the 1960s and 1970s.
“I was never taught, nor do I believe, that religion should be used as an excuse to discriminate,” he said. “I remember what it was like to grow up in the South in the 1960s and 1970s. Discrimination isn’t something that’s easy to oppose. It doesn’t always stare you in the face. It moves in the shadows. And sometimes it shrouds itself within the very laws meant to protect us.”









