Irbis wrote:See below. But, basically, they are defending something on par with slavery by doing nothing to repair damage done, justifying something that can't be justified today and giving gigantic "fuck you!" sign to every homosexual in UK.
Uh, proof of that? Again, simply pardoning only Mr. Turing sends an entirely different message from pardoning everyone (like SeaSkimmer mentioned).
Hell, if something as rigid as uncaring as Catholic Church can pardon falsely accused (see: Galileo) doing nothing makes you worse than CC. Quite the achievement.
Firstly, Mr. Turing most assuredly wasn't falsely accused of being a homosexual.
Secondly, to quote the guy you're RAEGING at:
"It is tragic that Alan Turing was convicted of an offence which now seems both cruel and absurd, particularly... given his outstanding contribution to the war effort," he said.
"However, the law at the time required a prosecution and, as such, long-standing policy has been to accept that such convictions took place and, rather than trying to alter the historical context and to put right what cannot be put right, ensure instead that we never again return to those times."
So, acknowledging the criminalization of homosexuality as cruel and absurd, while recognizing that the actions of the past cannot be undone but can never again be revisited is somehow vile and evil?
*yawn* And? Words are cheap, it's the deeds that matter.
Pardoning dead people is just words, you know. It's literally useless.
I'll risk invoking Godwin's law, but imagine what would have happened if, say, Westerwelle said that to family of homosexual/jew sent to Sachsenhausen. "We were just doing lawful orders". Gee, you think it would fly?
Except, you know, instead of just saying "just following orders!11!!11!", they're acknowledging that it was horrible and that pardoning Mr. Turing is, at best, a token effort that wouldn't accomplish jack-all-shit, while the best it could do is result in a round of back-slapping and saying "well, now we've proven we're good anti-homophobic people! no need to do anything else to ensure gay people are equal in society!"
Especially since he made the cogent point that it is altering the historical context and "trying to put right what cannot be put right," which seems to me to be an admission that it was a horrible event (for all people who felt the effects of being criminals merely for being homosexual).
Let me point you to the next thread over there, someone is getting fourth submarine due to this "pointless" revisionism. You know, guilt trip, reparation to victims. Tell me, what reparation was there in this case? They certainly don't feel guilt.
That's a lot more complex than what I would like to get into, but let's also be honest about Germany playing nice with Israel: there's also a large measure of self-interest involved with giving aid to the most developed and one of the wealthiest states in the Middle East.
Also, at this juncture with the UK economy as it is, would you honestly expect for a measure to give reparation money to homosexuals who felt the effects of this law and their kin to actually pass?
One man is a
start. Especially seeing in his case the punishment was
far more severe than usual. My argument wasn't that it was okay to be criminal if you made a contribution (and you seem to suggest being gay is a crime still

), it was that the act was doubly heinous considering who it happened to.
So, the act was not nearly so bad when it happened to other people as when it happened to Mr. Turing? Wow.
Yeah, except if they did not pardon Turing, I hardly see anyone else getting it.
No one's campaigning to get everyone pardoned, are they? Perhaps if Parliament saw a petition to pardon EVERYONE who was convicted of being a homosexual, that may have been acted upon because it wasn't picking a single person to pardon.
You know, I just can't stop wondering where computers would be today if he was left alone back then. If there was an event that hold progress in that branch for years, this would be one of the best candidates, and certainly something that destroyed any chance of UK having independent computer industry.
Yes, it was a tragedy that he died as a fairly direct result of being convicted as a criminal for being gay, but pardoning him does jack-shit.
EDIT: I'm a bit too lazy to retool this in light of what Evilsoup said, but his basic premise is very strong on why pardoning people for convictions under laws that are inherently unjust is a sort of recognition on the soundness of those laws. So, in light of that, I think that a blanket pardon of those convicted is not necessarily a great idea, while perhaps something more along the lines of a national day of recognition would be swell, as far as symbolic gestures go.
SDNet: Unbelievable levels of pedantry that you can't find anywhere else on the Internet!