In addition to the one in 2009?
As comfortable as I am with accepting homosexuality as normal human behaviour, I question whether he is right for a pardon. He knowingly broke the law when subject to high level security clearance and compromised national security.
Which does nothing to take away his towering genius. I have been slowly reading his biography and not got beyond university days but he just makes me feel inadequate.
Can I extend your point a bit, please?
In addition to now, by logical extension, having to pardon all homosexual folk convicted under the same Act as Turing, are we not also ethically bound to pardon everyone ever convicted under ANY Act that has subsequently been repealed? Logically, we should now go back through history and pardon anyone who was rightfully convicted under the laws in force at the time if they've since been repealed, no? Clearly ludicrous.
While I abhor what was done to Turing, it does seem as though his pardon has more to do with his sexuality and his brilliant work than it does with any true assessment of whether a pardon is legally justified.
As an aside, the current Queen was head of state when Turing was convicted. I haven't thought through whether there are any implications of her being the Monarch who was reigning at both the time he was convicted and then pardoned. Probably not, I guess. Though it does show just how much public opinion has changed on the matter of homosexuality in the reign of one Monarch.
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