Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 15th Dec 2012 19:11 UTC
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Member since:
2007-02-18
If we can't even get a "celebrity" like Turing pardoned, then what hope is here to get official recognition that those other unfortunates were wronged?
Most likely nil, but that doesn't change the fact that this is just playing the "he's famous, let's give him special treatment" - card. Yes, he was a hero, but no more or less than the policemen, firefighters, soldiers, even loving fathers that were prosecuted under the law, and they do not deserve half-measures. Either seek for pardon for them all and fail at that, or don't seek pardon for any of them.
I will never accept riches or fame as a substitute for equality. "
You see it as "half measure". I see it as "the beginning".
Why are people treating this as though it's a limited resource? Pardons aren't some rare mineral that you have to destroy the environment to dig up. I don't recall seeing pardon blocks in Minecraft.
Outside of the tech sphere, most people still don't know what Alan Turing did for the war. If this were even more public, with a figurehead who deserved his celebrity, then maybe we can get large swathes of the public to call for pardons for the rest of those who suffered.
It disappoints me to think that people here don't have a strategic bone in their body. This "all or nothing" rhetoric is fine, but "all or nothing" strategies tend to do nothing for anyone.
* And yes, I think we can safely say that Alan Turing did more for the war than most other people, and that makes him a very suitable figurehead.
Edited 2012-12-16 02:48 UTC