Leadership

Apple CEO Tim Cook calls #MeToo, DACA and Parkland student activists ‘heroes’

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Apple CEO Tim Cook tours labs to view demonstrations of apps during an event at Lane Tech College Prep High School on March 27, 2018 in Chicago, Illinois.
Scott Olson | Getty Images

"Right now, heroes do walk among us," Apple CEO Tim Cook said in an acceptance speech for the Human Rights Award presented by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference on Wednesday.

While paying tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the 50th anniversary of his death, Cook said that the student survivors of the shooting in Parkland, Fla., the activists of the #MeToo movement and those defending Dreamers and DACA are working effectively for change.

"These heroes know that patience is an indulgence that we cannot afford," Cook said.

In 2017 and 2018, the #MeToo and Time's Up movements have gotten the attention of, and started affecting, industries from Hollywood to Wall Street. The undocumented "dreamers" protected by the DACA program and their allies have rallied support from billionaires like Cook, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. And the Parkland mass shooting survivors inspired over 800,000 Americans to march against gun violence.

An Alabama-native, Cook returned to Birmingham on Wednesday to meet students and celebrate the rollout of Apple's Swift programming curriculum across Alabama Community College branches, as well as to accept his award.

Tim Cook tweet

Cook noted how the world was "made better" by King's work but added that there is still much to be done to accomplish King's dream of equality.

"We're still faced with widespread poverty, inequality, discrimination, inequality of economic opportunity, inequality in our justice system," Cook said. "Too much of a child's future is still determined by a zipcode they are born in, like the availability of a quality education."

In the past year alone, Cook has donated millions of dollars toward advancing children's access to education, fighting racial discrimination and other human rights causes.

Nonetheless, Cook said, "despite all of the challenges we face" and "despite the frustration," he is hopeful because of the people leading and supporting today's most influential movements.

These heroes know that patience is an indulgence that we cannot afford.
Tim Cook
Apple CEO

"They are the students of Parkland, Florida, fighting to make our schools safer. They are the citizens standing up for the Dreamers and other immigrants because they make our country stronger," Cook said. "They are the women upending the status quo with two simple words: 'Me too.' They are the people who are walking, marching, speaking up against the discrimination in our criminal justice system."

Cook closed his speech by emphasizing that the "there is no better time than the present" to fight for a future where "every person is truly equal."

"Fifty years later, it's up to us to answer Dr. King's call for justice," Cook said. "To bend that arc of the moral universe. To never stay silent on the things that matter. To be real heroes."

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