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Why the Russian iPhone monument to Steve Jobs was torn down

A monument to Steve Jobs was torn down in Russia. A reflection on anti-gay Russia or politics as usual in fickle St. Petersburg. 

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(AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky, FILE )
A memorial to late Apple Corp. co-founder, Steve Jobs, was erected in January 2013 in the courtyard of the Techno Park of the St. Petersburg National Research University of Information Technologies, Mechanics and Optics (ITMO University) in St. Petersburg, Russia. The six-foot tall interactive memorial has been taken down in response to last week's announcement that CEO of Apple, Tim Cook is openly gay.

In the wake of Apple CEO Tim Cook announcing that he was gay last week, Russia has very publicly separated with Apple by tearing down a giant interactive iPhone memorial to Steve Jobs which sat in St Petersburg.

The six-foot tall memorial, which featured moments from Jobs鈥 life and quotations from his speeches, was torn down by ZEFS, the very company that sponsored its creation in 2013, according to聽.

ZEFS chairman Maxim Dolgopov said the memorial was also聽dismantled聽as gesture against both Cook鈥檚 announcement and 鈥渁ggressive鈥 NSA spying according to published reports.

This kind of easy destruction of a monument likely came as little shock to those who follow Russian history or who took note of the pre-Sochi Olympic clashes over the increasingly .听

In June 2013, before Sochi, the聽聽to minors.

On the opening day of the Olympics (Feb. 7, 2013), police arrested at least 14 gay rights activists in St. Petersburg and Moscow, according to news reports.听

鈥淣early three-quarters of Russians believe that homosexually is morally unacceptable, more than disapprove of other hot-button issues such as extramarital affairs, gambling and abortion,鈥 reported LiveScience.com.听

Tearing down a statue may be part of the anti-gay Russian attitude, but it's also not entirely surprising considering that it took place a city that is famous for dramatic, power-player breakups.

St. Petersburg is the Victor Victoria of Russian name changes. It was first known as St. Petersburg, then Petrograd, Leningrad, and back around to St. Petersburg.

St. Petersburg was founded in 1703 by the czar Peter the Great. In 1914, the name was considered too Germanic sounding and was changed to Petrograd. After the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924, the Soviet Union changed the city's name to Leningrad. Leningrad became St. Petersburg again 67 years later when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.

Therefore, another way to view the destruction of this paean聽to Apple's cofounder is that it's placing Tim Cook and Steve Jobs among the ranks of Ivan the Terrible, the Romanovs, Joseph Stalin, Vladimir Lenin and the city itself for being uncoupled.

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