Turing pardoned almost 60 years after state persecution killed him

December 28, 2013
Issue 

On Christmas Eve, the Queen of England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and the Commonwealth deigned to pardon one of the 20th century鈥檚 most important mathematicians of the crime of homosexuality.

In 1952, Alan Turing was tried and convicted of engaging in sex with other men. He was presented with the choice of prison or chemical castration. He chose the latter, estrogen treatments that caused him to grow breasts, made him impotent, and drove him to depression.

He was fired from his job with the British government. Washington barred him from entering the US, which he had often visited to work with mathematicians in Bell Labs.

In 1954, he ate an apple laced with cyanide, which was ruled a suicide. He was 41 years old.

In 1936, Turing developed a model of the 鈥渦niversal computing machine鈥, a concept which lies behind all computers. Other subsequent mathematical models of computers have been found to be equivalent to what has become known as the 鈥淭uring machine鈥.

Besides this accomplishment, Turing broke the German enigma code in the Second World War, and proved two important mathematical theorems, and other work.

The law under which Turing was convicted was repealed in 1967. But in the years since, bids to have him pardoned were repeatedly rebuffed. The most recent was last year, 60 years after his conviction, when British parliament voted down a motion to pardon him.

The reasoning of the majority of this most august body was that since the law was the law in 1952, and Turing had knowingly violated it, he was a lawbreaker and lawbreakers cannot be pardoned. This decision provoked an immediate response, when 10,000 signed a petition that Turing be put on the new 10 pound note.

There was also international outrage. All this led to the Queen鈥檚 pardon this year.

The wording of the pardon itself is disgusting: 鈥淣ow Know Ye: that We, in consideration of circumstances humbly represented unto Us, are Graciously pleased to extend Our Grace and Mercy unto the said Alan Mathison Turing and to grant him Our Free Pardon posthumously in respect of said convictions.鈥

The 鈥淲e鈥 and 鈥淯s鈥 and 鈥淥ur鈥 refer to the Queen鈥檚 double personhood, as both the physical person Elizabeth Windsor and as the embodiment of the 鈥渂ody politic鈥, which is immutable and 鈥渦tterly void of Infancy and Old Age.鈥 It鈥檚 something like the Pope鈥檚 鈥淲e,鈥 which refers to him and God.

But Turning does not need forgiving because he did nothing wrong. If any entity requires being extended Grace and Mercy it is the UK government for its crime against Turing, which arguably directly led to his death.

Turing was pardoned because of his fame and accomplishments. But some 75,000 men were convicted under the same law as Turing, of whom 26,000 are still alive. Turing鈥檚 pardon should be extended to the 75,000, and would improve the lives of the 26,000 today.

A final thought -- those reading this are doing so on a 鈥淭uring machine鈥.

[Barry Sheppard was a long-time leader of the US Socialist Workers Party and the Fourth International. He recounts his experience in the SWP in a two-volume book, The Party 鈥 the Socialist Workers Party 1960-1988, available from . Read .]


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