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Fight Begins To Secure Turing Papers For Bletchley Park Museum

Blacklaw writes "Auction house Christie's is planning to sell offprints of Alan Turing's early work for an estimated £500,000 — and the fight has begun to raise the money so UK codebreaking museum and charity Bletchley Park can house the documents in the building where Turing performed his war-winning work and birthed the concept of a modern 'universal computer.' If the money isn't raised, the papers could disappear into a private archive, never to be seen again."

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  1. Re:The lesson of politics is that... by sgt101 · · Score: 5, Informative

    You are trolling, but for the sake of accuracy here is what is generally acknowledged to be the case.

    - after the war he struggled to get the kind of role and financial support he should have been given without a quibble or a bat of the eye - he eventually got a very good job at the University of Manchester, which is a great place, but it is amazing that he wasn't treated as a national treasure (was it 2 of Hilberts challenges he solved? Even allowing for the secrecy around the work during the war someone in the know should have pushed it on that basis)
    - he was targeted for blackmail due to being gay when it was illegal
    - the police arrested him and he was prosecuted and punished with hormone therapy
    - the depression caused by the therapy and the awful behavior of society towards him, and his own personal isolation caused him to take his life
    - he did it in such a way to allow his mother to go on believing that it was an accident

    In 1956 the UK government had no reason to kill him, in fact it never did - quite the opposite. Instead they treated a great man with indifference and contempt because of his sexuality. I can't say that I can think of a more pathetic story in all senses of the word.

    If you want to feel worse about it (as a human) then think what might have been if he had lived 25 more years and had enjoyed the appropriate support

    --
    --------------------------------------------- "In the end, we're all just water and old stars."
  2. Re:The lesson of politics is that... by wlad · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is an incredibly sad story, I always found it one of the most hateful stories about human behaviour but also a good lesson. People with extraordinary talent are used as long as they are needed, then the 'war' is over and the public doesn't care about them anymore. Then they turn into just another pawn that can be used for political games because they are 'different' in some way. Your past performances in no way protect you, as people take those for granted. In a way, it's the comparable to how soldiers/war heroes are treated, for example those with post traumatic stress. Locked away and forgotten.