New Call For Turing Pardon
mikejuk writes "As 2012, Alan Turing Year, draws to close a group of highly regarded UK scientists, including Professor Stephen Hawking, have repeated the call for a posthumous pardon for Turing's criminal conviction in a letter to the Telegraph. The letter has re-opened the debate, which is controversial even for those who support the idea that Turing was treated in an unfair and appalling way, was formally acknowledged by the UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown in 2009 when he apologized for the treatment Turing had received. In February Justice Minister Lord McNally rebuffed a 23,000 signature petition for a pardon saying: 'A posthumous pardon was not considered appropriate as Alan Turing was properly convicted of what at the time was a criminal offense.'"
. . . he needs an official declaration that he was never guilty in the first place, and should never have been prosecuted.
Prime Minister Cameron makes a general statement not just for Turing but for all those tortured and prosecuted under what we now rightly see was a terrible and cruel "law". Society has moved on and a bold declaration that not just Turing but all those convicted of crimes of this nature are considered to be pardoned would solidify how far we have progressed.
An official "pardon" for a joke of a "crime" would just legitimize the "crime", and say "it's ok to be gay, but only if you're a brilliant scientist". The above declaration would, on the other hand, send a much stronger message, and would actually mean something.
—Ambrose Bierce, "The Devil's Dictionary"
And the Germans don't need to apologize for the Holocaust since the Jews were put to death in what was at the time a lawful process.
I'm sorry, but blaming the rules is just another way to not acknowledge just how badly they fucked him over.
Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
The word of the day is Absolve. Not for the government but for the Crown and specifically the Queen to Absolve Turing
of all crimes moral, ethical, and physical.
absolve /bzälv/
Verb
Declare (someone) free from blame, guilt, or responsibility.
Give absolution for (a sin).
If he was never convicted, he wouldn't need a pardon would he?
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
I think they should let the conviction stand.
It is a reminder of how far we have come...and of how far we still have to go.
And the Germans don't need to apologize for the Holocaust since the Jews were put to death in what was at the time a lawful process.
I'm sorry, but blaming the rules is just another way to not acknowledge just how badly they fucked him over.
Your point is valid, that legal behavior isn't necessarily moral behavior, and that admitting that he was wrongly prosecuted is implicitly suggesting that the people in power at the time were in the wrong. However, I don't actually believe that the Nazis ever actually bothered to legalize the murder of Jewish people under the legal system, they just went ahead and did it anyway. They didn't really bother with stuff like trials, for all but the most rare of cases. I'm sure that someone with more historical knowledge of the 1930s German court systems can add additional information to the thread, though.
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
I am about 40 years old, and for most of my life considered homosexuals to be somehow inferior with through genetics or lifestyle choice. My world view has changed quite a bit, mostly by seeing real-world homosexuals, and strangely enough a closeted homosexual who claimed to be "cured".
It is hard to put a date on when my view changed, but now I see how wrong I was and fully support same-sex marriage and make sure to show my support as a way of undoing some of the ignorance I helped spread.
In the same way, we have an opportunity to not just pardon Turing, but express just how wrong we were. It will never erase the harm, but it will help heal the wound.
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
I really do not get this "You must apologise for everything!" mentality that has sprung up over the past 15 years or so.
I'm from the UK. The UK has done some seriously horrible things in both it's distant and recent history.
While Turing is a personal tragedy, his story isn't even a blip on the radar of what has been carried out by my country in the grand scheme of horribleness.
Yes. Outlawing homosexuality is wrong. Leaving India, Ireland etc. to starve is wrong. Conquest at the barrel of a gun is wrong. Slavery is wrong. We get it. But, to be harsh, the current generation isn't really disputing any of that. Your beef is with the generations that have come before, rotting in their graves and if given their lives again, probably would have done the exact same thing.
What meaning does a pardon or an apology have if it is not from those that actually performed the act?
For it just smacks of the worst kind of tokenistic politics.
I for one am sick to death of meaningless apologising for the many and numerous mistakes of my parents, grandparents, great grandparents and so on.
I have enough mistakes of my own to be accountable for.
... but everyone ever convicted under this barbaric law should have their convictions expunged. Keep in mind there are probably some that are still alive, which makes it even more important.
Christianity, Islam and perhaps Judaism are about the only people that believe being gay is wrong as far as I can tell. These 3 religions basically worship the same god, and he hates gay people.
What other religions are against it?
Some Christians can tell that it's not right to persecute gay people though, and try to mess with the parts of the Bible that condemn man-sex, to bring it round to their own way of thinking. Kind of admirable, but still ultimately misguided..
which is totally what she said
A posthumous pardon was not considered appropriate as Alan Turing was properly convicted of what at the time was a criminal offense.
Don't let bigots hide behind this kind of sophistry; forget a pardon; let's have parliament declare that the law was inhumane, unjust, invalid, and that all convictions are vacated.
Nope, I don't live in the U.K. and don't know the legal process enough to fill in the details. However, the U.S. and British system share deep roots, so I expect that our concept of vacating a conviction has some parallel there. Here, it is normally done for egregious legal error during the trial, but I am sure that it could also be legislated...
Will God pardon him?
Of course not, your obvious homophobia makes it clear that this figment of your own imagination could never pardon him.
OK in 2012, everyone's cool with Turing being gay today...but honestly, when does this shit stop? Retroactive pardons? Retroactive suspension of the conviction and expunging of the record?
I agree in principle, but what's the Statute of Limitations on historical grievances? Can we just settle on one generation or 50 years, whichever is greater?
Or are we going to go through history and insist on apologies for everything everyone ever did wrong or had wrong done to them? Go back far enough and everyone's a victim of something at SOME point.
Because frankly, the very idea is colossally stupid.
-Styopa
Just because next year your country will legalize having sex with sheep, cows, babies, and any small creature that moves doesn't make it right today, ( or tomorrow for that fact).
Slippery slope anyone?
They're there in their room. You're on your own.
Unsubtle, no decent hook line. Inept.
Zero out of five troll-points for you. Get back under your bridge until you've learned to do it properly.
However controversial, the Justice Minister's point seems to make sense from a legal standpoint: issuing a pardon could be interpreted as the UK government accepting liability for these past events, in a similar way that issuing apologies to African countries for the triangular trade might.
maybe because Law is not a Turing-complete Language?
'A posthumous pardon was not considered appropriate as Alan Turing was properly convicted of what at the time was a criminal offense.'"
Lots of things are criminal offenses that should not be. The fact that it may have been the law at the time does not make it in any way justifiable. A pardon would hurt nothing, cost (almost) nothing, and show that we've evolved. While I think that apologizing to a dead person is a ridiculous idea, the idea of overturning a terrible legal precedent is not silly at all. In theory this verdict could be used to support future government sponsored lynchings if it is not overturned.
OK in 2012, everyone's cool with Turing being gay today...but honestly, when does this shit stop? Retroactive pardons? Retroactive suspension of the conviction and expunging of the record?
The problem is that the legal precedent stands and can be used to support future cases. I agree that apologizing to the dead is quite silly but changing bad legal precedent is an extremely good idea. The point is to prevent future acts of malice by the government. If we honor the contributions of the victim in the process then that is just a bonus.
How about a general policy of offering general clemency to anyone at any time in history who was convicted or punished for a crime which would not be an offense today or if it was, its maximum sentence or "severity" would be less today than what the person received?
In other words, don't give Turing special treatment, extend the pardon to everyone who faced similar charges in similar circumstances.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Yeah, that's why I think runaway slaves should be and forever will be looked upon poorly. I mean, they knew what they were doing was against the law. Harriet Tubman was just a lawbreaker and enabler for those criminals, plain and simple. And Rosa Parks was just a troublemaker who deserved to go to jail. And those stupid interracial couples daring to love each other when the laws clearly stated that wasn't allowed. Don't you know two consenting adults can't just go around having sex with whomever they want and think that the government shouldn't be punishing you for it. (sorry I don't know British equivalents though I am sure there are plenty)
If it's good enough for Baroness Trumpington, then it's good enough for me!
seriously. who gives a fuck?
I imagine his relatives for a start...
I am deeply saddened to hear the news that Justice Minister Lord McNally is an asshat. I humbly propose a petition in which it is requested of the British Government to formally rescind the title of "Lord" from this individual. A title of such distinction should not be accorded to asshats.
You're on! I go several days each week without committing any felonies and I can prove it!
I just have to add two more rules: My lawyer reviews the camera before he turns it over to you and I get to say "sorry, not today, maybe tomorrow?"
Within a week you'll owe me a grand or two.
It's also why you should never, under any circumstances, talk to the police.
AMEN brother!
"A posthumous pardon was not considered appropriate as Alan Turing was properly convicted of what at the time was a criminal offense."
That's what pardons are for!
What?
Turning was not a smoke-able form of tobacco.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Will God pardon him? If your a Christian, perhaps.
I certainly hope God's decision to pardon Turing is not based on my being a Christian.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Whatever you are smoking, stop, it's really hurting your brain cells.
What makes Turing any different from any other person who was convicted of this offence back when it was illegal?
I'm aware of his work on the Enigma machines and he is quite rightly recognised for this, but a person's achievements should have no bearing on how they are treated in the eyes of the law. If we go ahead and pardon Turing, we must go ahead and pardon everyone else who was convicted under the same legislation.
Similarly, what makes the law against homosexuality any different or any worse than other laws which have changed over the years?
If you follow this idea to its logical conclusion, then we must surely go ahead and pardon anyone whoever lived, who was ever convicted of something which is no longer a crime. And of course, a formal process would need to be created to ensure that pardons are issued in the future if and when we change other laws.
So I've nothing against pardoning Turing and would probably consider it a good idea. I just feel it's important that we act in a consistent manner and understand the consequences which would come with such a solution.
Backup not found: (A)bort (R)etry (P)anic
> 'A posthumous pardon was not considered appropriate as Alan Turing was properly convicted of what at the time was a criminal offense.'
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Turing doesn't deserve pardon.
He knew the rules, he broke them anyways, he got what he deserved.
Homosexuality at the time was a major social taboo and a criminal offense. The fact that it shouldn't have been the case is not the question. And of course, pardoning him and him alone would mean that the law doesn't apply to great scientists, a terrible message IMHO.
It is the shame that Turing had to die for this reason but wherever we do, it won't change the past.
Islam definitely idolizes a completely different god than Christians and Jews. Islam takes only some of the Bible, mixes in a large amount of non-biblical doctrine and sacrilege, provides for man-imposed world domination, and then calls it peace-loving. Christians and Jews worship the same God of the Bible (not Allah). While there are other differences, the primary difference is that Jews do not recognize Jesus as the Messiah. I am not sure what you mean by misguided, but I'll comment how I think is appropriate: Sin is sin. Homosexuality should not be the primary focus, as being a liar, a thief, an adulterer, and not loving God are things we are all guilty of committing. If we see just how wicked we truly are, when compared to a perfect God, sexuality becomes fairly insignificant. The Bible indicates that homosexuals will not enter the Kingdom of God, but neither will a couple of people having sex outside of marriage, people stealing food from a store, nor people lying to their friends. If you swindle another person or a company out of money or a product, you are included in that list. If you commit one single murder, that makes you a murderer. Similarly, it only takes one little white lie to make you a liar, steal only one piece of candy to make you a thief, and you only have to look at one person lustfully to be guilty of the sin of adultery (or fornication). Many people think that they will go to Heaven because they are good. The Bible says that there are no good people. The only way to Heaven is to abandon your sinful life, accept that Jesus took your punishment on himself by dying, and accept his sacrifice as payment in full for your sins. After that, live your life as close to sinless as you can, read the Bible, pray to God in the name of Jesus, and then tell others about how to obtain salvation from an eternity in Hell. True Christians don't get saved as a way to improve life. It probably will make your life more difficult, since you will post things like this on Slashdot, which will result in getting spammed by multiple flamers, probably modded down, and lots of cursings and death wishes will come your way. Salvation should be pursued for the purposes of serving and obeying the God that gave you life, which makes your eternity MUCH better than the Hell we all deserve.
Will God pardon him? If your a Christian, perhaps.
Bad grammar, on the other hand, is unforgivable. Eternal fires await those who mix up "your" and "you're". Hell will be slightly hotter than your current residence (under a bridge).
Apparently you don't realize the massive advantage that accrued to whites as a whole due to slavery, Jim Crow, and other forms of wage theft that blacks suffered through history.
The average white person receives gets significantly more wealth from his/her parents, and the reason for that is because their parents were able to pass down more wealth, and so on.
When a class (or race) systematically have their entire wealth stolen, they cannot pass wealth they do not have on to their children. That disparity is not solved in a single generation.
Oh, and telling people to "shut up" because you disagree with them, how very Limbaugh-ian of you.
Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
It is an action done to someone who does not consent. It does not matter what society thinks about it. Slavery was never "right". It might have been considered "moral" at one point.
And yet you still found the need to respond. Methinks you were more bothered than you let on.
You're still punishing people who were not at fault for those who came before them. The blood money you're calling for comes from the blood of those who are living, not those who are dead. We have a social safety net to help those who might not have been born into opportunity. At various times in our history, Irish, Chinese, and Mexicans have faced challenges due to their origin at various times in our history, and as individuals they have risen above the admittedly unfair situation to succeed.
Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
Salvation should be pursued for the purposes of serving and obeying the God that gave you life, which makes your eternity MUCH better than the Hell we all deserve.
I have to say that your god is kind of a dick. I mean, he creates humans to be inherently flawed, and then when the original humans behave in a flawed manner as expected, he damns them and all of their descendants to eternal punishment? Oh, except we can get out of the punishment we "deserve" by providing obeisance in the exact manner described in an ancient book. Some of the things we're prohibited from doing according to that book include eating shellfish, wearing clothing made from mixed threads, letting women speak, and having gay sex. Perfectly logical.
Personally, I prefer to think that I'm a pretty decent person, and if I've committed any moral wrongdoings, I'll make amends for them myself rather than letting a millenia-old proxy take the fall for me. I'm a grown up, I can take the blame for my own actions -- and I don't need to take blame for anything my ancestors did.
Look at it from the position of an outsider. Let say that Christians believe "N" crazy things. Given that, we can say that Muslims believe "N +/- 1" crazy things. Sure, they're not equal, but they're roughly equivalent.
Paragraphs, motherfucker, can you use them?
Rush Limbaugh can jump a hole full of monkey feces. It was a different time. Tell me why I should have to pay for my great grandparents mistake? That's like having the kids go to jail because the parents are serial killers.
It sounds like a lot of people are saying, "It was unlawful back then, but it is legal now, so he should receive a pardon!" If that is the case, shouldn't the converse also apply? Should people be prosecuted now for participating in an activity that was legal at the time, but is no longer? I know that it used to be legal to drive 70 miles per hour on a highway near my home, and the speed limit is now 55mph. Should I now be issued a citation for each time I drove at the previously higher rate of speed? Should most of us be prosecuted for taking tax deductions that were legal at the time, but have now been eliminated? If you are convicted of a committing a crime while it is a crime, you are a criminal. Just because it is now legal to smoke marijuana in Washington state doesn't invalidate your 6 month old conviction for drug possession.
Michael Jackson, Al Roker, Reverend Jesse Jackson, there are tons of blacks who are better off now than those came before them. Hell, look at Obama, if you tell me with a straight face that blacks today don't have the opportunity now than 200 years ago, you need a history lesson.
IMO they seem to be an attempt to wipe history from the books and give everyone their kumbaya moment to hold hands and pretend everything is hunky dory. Unless the offended party is still alive, leave them on the books as a lesson to our children of what can happen when government exceeds its bounds.
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
Following this logic, if he were still alive and in prison, there would be no reason to release him once his "crime" ceased to be labeled as a "crime."
If he were still in prison when the law was repealed he would automatically have been released but would not get a pardon. Indeed I really don't think that a pardon is appropriate but perhaps for slightly different reasons: pardoning a crime implies you are forgiving the individual who committed the crime. This is the wrong way around. By our modern standards, he committed no crime and so has no need to ask for a pardon. Indeed by petitioning that Turing be pardoning you have to implicitly assume that he did something that needs to be pardoned!
Methinks he was mostly bothered by how utterly stupid you appear to be. I know I am but any response is a good response, hmm? I'm sure each comment gets you off which is good because that is about all you get sitting in your dark messy room by yourself. Snickering proudly to yourself how witty and clever you are; knowing deep down that you are no more intelligent than anyone else. You just have time, a lot of time.
It's an offence, with a `c'.
Wasn't that more or less the same sort of heinous governmental malfeasance?
Christianity, Islam and perhaps Judaism are about the only people that believe being gay is wrong as far as I can tell. These 3 religions basically worship the same god, and he hates gay people.
God doesn't hate gays, he hates some of the things they do. He hates some of the things you and I do as well. "Being gay" isn't a sin, having sex with another man is, and that's not nearly as bad as having sex with another man's wife. After all, that one's in the "big ten".
I was talking with a lesbian friend who wished she could be straight "so I won't go to hell." I pointed out to her that it was as much of a sin for me to eat her pussy as it was another woman, since we're not married, and pointed out the core tenet of the religion itself, which is your sins are forgiven. All that is required is that you repent. And as I said, gays' sins are no worse than mine.
Some Christians can tell that it's not right to persecute gay people though
The irony is that people persecuting gays are sinning in God's name. Christ himself said "treat others as you would want to be treated." That makes persecuting people a sin.
Free Martian Whores!
Go clean the shit off of your lips and get help.
I have to say that your god is kind of a dick. I mean, he creates humans to be inherently flawed, and then when the original humans behave in a flawed manner as expected, he damns them and all of their descendants to eternal punishment
This was the conclusion I came to myself actually. It made it a lot less scary to realise that it all wasn't true anyway. Even if the Christian god did exist, he would not be worth worshipping.
It's kind of funny how when you do things with other people, or when given a challenge by other people, it often feels more meaningful and purposeful than it would have if you'd just decided to do the same thing of your own accord. I think of religion a bit like that now. If you're told that life has meaning, it's a lot more comforting to just accept that than to realise that in fact it has no meaning other than what you choose to give it..
which is totally what she said
The recipients of that stolen wealth were Southern plantation owners who saw their cities and homes burnt to the ground during the civil war. When you combine that with the fact that only about 10% of wealthy people acquired their wealth through inheritance and the many generations that have passed since those days, you will find that there are very few people today who can trace their wealth back to slave-owning days. Yet, everyone who shares their skincolor are assumed to be guilty of a horrible crime, despite that many of us can trace our ancestry to those who fought for the North against those slaveowners and who had brothers who died fighting. And yet, despite the sacrifices of my ancestors, I'm being told that I should be punished for the sins of those that they fought against!
Z
I never said that blacks today don't have more opportunity now than 200 years ago. What I said was that the economics of the wage theft that occurred then is still evident in the relative wealth of blacks vs. whites.
You can always point out individuals that have done better (notice your examples made their money in the entertainment industry, so too Paul Robeson, Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson, Lena Horne, Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods).
But taken in the aggregate, whites have benefited from the wage theft that occurred throughout history. It's becoming more class-based (more whites are getting wages stolen because of laws like Right To Work and such) but race is still a big component of it.
Ever wonder why "Right To Work" laws were first passed in the South in the 1950's, at the beginning of the Civil Rights era?
While I don't believe that direct-payment "reparations" are the answer, to dismiss proponents with "shut up" is to ignore the history of black/white disparity.
Hopelessly pedantic since 1963.
Apparently you don't realize the massive advantage that accrued to whites as a whole due to slavery, Jim Crow, and other forms of wage theft that blacks suffered through history.
And you don't "realize" it either. These sorts of racist myths need to die a hard death.
Actually, his relatives seem OK with the formal apology and aren't calling for anything more. Most of them appear to accept that the conviction was made and understand that it was the law at the time. They're sad that his life was ruined but are remarkably reasonable about the whole thing.
Stop imagining, there are plenty of interviews that actually show what his relatives think of things.
How about we all stop demanding some paper pusher to file some forms and build a statue to Turing and his achievements instead. That would have far more impact on the current and future attitudes towards Turing and what was done to him.
...when they castrated Turing.
What fucking 'reparations' have we given to black people? Letting the ride up front in the bus?
Oh, hey Fred Phelps. Hope you enjoyed getting rammed in port 80 (or the Glory Hole as it's know by hackers) by a whole bunch of anonymous guys.
The Flying Spaghetti Monster says you are damned for all eternity.
http://www.statisticbrain.com/welfare-statistics/
Yeah, because white people don't collect welfare. Only black people. (and, yeah, that's sarcasm)
I did use paragraphs, AC. Unfortunately, I my comment was posted from my el-cheapo Android phone, which is set up differently than my pc. When I previewed the posting, I saw that everything had been run together. I decided that I didn't want to spend another 6 weeks trying to fix the posting on my phone, so I decided to click Submit. I knew all along that YOU would be responding, most likely with poor grammar and/or punctuation usage, and that you would most likely be using words that should come out of the mouth of nobody.
My 6th grade English teacher used to tell us that people that use "cuss words" were just too lazy and immature to learn the English language well enough to be able to express themselves well enough to be able to get the point across, necessitating the use of foul language as a "crutch." She was probably onto something there.
I ate the Flying Spaghetti Monster for breakfast. Of course, then I had to get the taste out, so I fried up some bacon. All better.
Yes because 39% is much lower than 38%
Here is a verse from the Bible that shows more detail on who will end up in Hell. This is above and beyond the "big ten," as are plenty of other verses in the Bible. I can provide more, or you can do the research, if you so desire.
(NASB) 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 Or do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor homosexuals, nor thieves, nor the covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers, will inherit the kingdom of God.
I completely agree with your statement that people that persecute gays are sinning. Christians are supposed to help people to be able to make a decision in love and respect. Doing so via a form of persecution will most likely harden people hearts. Instead of infuriating them, a Christian should make a non-Christian think, because a decision has to be made voluntarily to follow God. It must be voluntary.
Mcgrew also stated, "God doesn't hate gays, he hates some of the things they do. He hates some of the things you and I do as well." Here is something to keep in mind in regards to this. God might not hate you for being a sinner, but ALL sin will be punished. If you want to accept the punishment upon yourself and endure an eternity of agony, just keep living like you desire. YOU will be punished for YOUR sin, and that punishment will never end. In order to escape the fury of Hell, you absolutely must repent and accept Jesus. Repentance means that you admit that you are a sinner, and then you turn from your sinful lifestyle and live according to God's Word (The Bible).
The part about accepting Jesus means: I'm a sinner. I have broken God's laws, and I'm going to be sentenced to Hell. The only way I can get out of it is if somebody else takes my punishment for me, and if the Judge accepts that. Since God is the Judge, he has already accepted a plea bargain arrangement to keep me from being punished. He allowed his Son, Jesus Christ, to come to Earth as a man, live like the rest of us (but without sin), and to be given the death penalty, despite the fact that he didn't deserve it. God then breathed life back into his Son, bringing him back from the dead, to live eternally as our Savior. This was the plea bargain, and I only have to accept that it was "payment in full" for the wrongs I've done.
I had a moment of sadness after reading your comment. I know that you'll vehemently defend your beliefs and I'm certainly not interested in persuading you otherwise, but it still saddens me to see thought processes like these. Stuff like this is what I believed for years and years and wasted a lot of time arguing about till I decided to believe in what is believable.
It always seemed absurd to me to imagine trying to convince someone to *un*believe what they're already 100% convinced of. If you get curious though, then trust me when I say, there's plenty of literature that will help you understand.
I'd happily pay you Tuesday for a biopsy today!
Would any other war hero have received the same treatment? The question here is double standards, surrounding the secrecy of Turing's work, the eternal nature of Turing's crime (does this remind anyone else of the war on drugs?), and the severity of his sentence.
Take Brian Carbury for example, an "ace in a day" New Zealand fighter pilot.
My emphasis. In modern parlance, that sounds like an ITAR transgression, for which the current maximum sentence is detainment without charge. Let's see here. Door #1: a £100 fine. Door #2: chemical castration. Cue the game show music for the tense decision making. Tick tock tick tock, what will he choose?
Because of the upper crust attitude toward secrecy, Turing was positioned as an ordinary sex offender in the mind of the public instead of a flawed hero--no let me fix that--an outcast hero whose only flaw was being born into a culture of soft vegetables and spittle-spewing homophobes.
His chemical castration makes one wonder what the proportionate punishment might be (far, far worse than chemical castration) for a white-collared repeat pedophile, or for the white haired goats or moral opprobrium who vainly sheltered this behaviour so as not to publicly besmirch their high moral ground.
It was a crime at the time. Yes, the whole social structure was a crime at the time, and then some.
I know that what was done to Turing was grossly immoral. I don't need the government to tell me it was wrong and, more to the point, I don't care what the government thinks. I'm only interested in reducing punishments and probabilities of being caught for the crimes I, my family, and my friends commit most frequently and if Turing's persecution can be used to this effect I support the effort.
Getting a Government to apologise or admit to a wrong doing is utterly pointless. It is not a person and itself has no emotion nor compassion.
Fear not GP, although your attempt was poor, your 0/5 is a Slashdot troll score, a site which has a long standing reputation for world class trolls. Don't be discouraged; practice on less demanding sites. When you can consistently score 4/5 on most Reddit boards you will be ready for Slashdot.
It could be said that the modern African American population has profited from slavery as well; they could have been born in some African nation under a dictator instead of America.
you dont know what people will say in 100 years. and they could reverse the pardon.
he knew he did something wrong.
he got caught.
its over. move on.
The only conceivable fair way to have any reparation paid out is to take it from old estates, and not on any money earned in this lifetime. But, frankly, there is no practical way of assessing who owes what. Therefore, I think that a general inheritance tax is the most fair form of tax.
They did, after all, pardon Galileo in 1992 after having sentenced him to life in prison for his heretical beliefs in a non-heliocentric cosmology.
I never said that blacks today don't have more opportunity now than 200 years ago. What I said was that the economics of the wage theft that occurred then is still evident in the relative wealth of blacks vs. whites.
When you say "Whites", what exactly do you mean- English, Irish, French, German, Russian, Italian, etc.? There is no such thing as a "white" race, and most ethnic groups have faced some pretty serious prejudice at times. The northern chapters of the KKK spent most of their time hating on the Irish and the Catholics, just as one example. The Asians have all had the short end of the stick, the Jews have had plenty of rough times, and while we're bringing up past wrongs how about we talk about Women in general?
For most of us "white" people, our ancestors didn't see any benefits from slavery either directly or indirectly. My ancestors got fucked over in the coal mines for generations before finally digging their asses out of poverty following WWII by using the GI programs. Some of them died fighting in the Civil War. And you have the balls to come to me and tell me that the blood of my ancestors, who NEVER saw any gains from their skin color, and literally had to claw their way out of the dirt, was not enough and that I ought to give you more money now? Fuck off.
It seems that you nor the justice minister Lord McNally don't seem to understand the meaning of pardon. Pardon is forgiveness of a crime and the cancellation of the relevant penalty. It doesn't mean that law wasn't broken at the time. If a person is proven to be innocent after first being convicted, the more proper way of dealing with it, is overturning the conviction/retrial etc, instead of just pardoning.
If the speed limit on a particular stretch of road is 60, and they decide to lower it to 50, do they retrospectively give tickets to everyone who was doing 55 in the past?
If the speed limit is 60 and they raise it to 70, do they annul all the tickets for people who were doing 65 in the past?
The answer to both of these is NO.
There are good reasons why (most!) laws are not retrospective - we are expected to obey the law as it is at the moment. If I do something which is legal today, I (usually) can't be prosecuted under a law which is enacted tomorrow.
He was convicted under the law of the day, and no one has claimed that he didn't do what he was convicted of doing. The legal machinery did what it was supposed to do. The law under which he was convicted was repealed, and no one could be prosecuted, let alone convicted, of that crime today.
The legal machinery is not about what is right. It is not about what is moral. It's about what is legal. One might hope that there is some correlation between what is moral and what is legal, but that's not always the case.
No, it's about the same; the difference is 1%.
I still believe someone left the poisoned apple for Mr. Turing. I believe he was murdered by cia types and that he was framed on the suicide issue. This tagline is one I use on many online forums i use...
"Where did this apple come from?"
--Alan Turing
1% is a few thousand people.
You're right. And those people make up a very small percentage of the 350,000,000 people we have here in the US.
I don't want to call you racist, but you're making it very hard to not come to that conclusion.