WWII codebreaker Alan Turing becomes 1st gay man on a British bank note

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WWII codebreaker Alan Turing becomes 1st gay man on a British bank note​

The Bank of England started circulating the new £50 bank notes Wednesday, which would have been the British war hero’s 109th birthday.



The Bank of England began circulating its new £50 bank notes featuring World War II codebreaker Alan Turing on Wednesday, which would have been the pioneering math genius’ 109th birthday.

Often referred to as the “father of computer science and artificial intelligence,” Turing was hailed a war hero and granted an honor by King George VI at the end of the war for helping to defeat the Nazis. Despite this, however, he died as a disgraced “criminal” — simply for being a gay man.

“I’m delighted that Alan Turing features on our new £50 bank note. He was a brilliant scientist whose thinking still shapes our lives today,” Sarah John, Bank of England's chief cashier, told NBC News. “However, his many contributions to society were still not enough to spare him the appalling treatment to which he was subjected simply because he was gay. By placing him on this new £50, we are celebrating his life and his achievements, of which we should all be very proud.”

Born in London on June 23, 1912, Turing graduated from the University of Cambridge in 1934. At the start of WWII, he joined the British government’s wartime operation, designing a code-breaking machine known as “Bombe.” Bombe went on to supply the Allied Forces with significant military intelligence, processing, at its peak, 89,000 coded messages per day.

At the end of the war, Turing was made an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, an honor granted by the royal family to a selected few for their contribution to science, arts and public service.

In the years that followed, Turing carried on working as a computer scientist. His design for the Automatic Computing Engine, or ACE, would have been the first and most advanced computer for his time. But his colleagues at the National Physical Laboratory feared the engineering was too complex and decided to build a much smaller pilot ACE instead. Their competitors at Manchester University consequently won the race, and the disheartened Turing had joined their forces as deputy director. Turing also wrote the first programming manual.

“What we really don't realize is how this moment and Turing's vision changed the entire world. Before this, literally nobody in the world had imagined that a single machine could apply countless strings of abstract symbols. Now we know them as programs,” according to David Leslie of the Alan Turing Institute.

But being an outstanding computer scientist and a war hero didn’t spare Turing from what some have called a “witch hunt” of gay and bisexual men in the U.K., which led to the imprisonment of thousands of gay men and those suspected of being gay throughout the 1950s.

In January 1952, Turing was prosecuted for indecency over his relationship with another man in Manchester. Despite being referred to as a “national asset” during this trial by character witness Hugh Alexander, the head of cryptanalysis at the Government Communications Headquarter, Turing was persecuted.

The Bank of England began circulating its new £50 bank notes featuring World War II codebreaker Alan Turing on Wednesday.
The Bank of England began circulating its new £50 bank notes featuring World War II codebreaker Alan Turing on Wednesday.Bank of England

In March of that year, Turing pleaded guilty and, to avoid imprisonment, had to agree to be chemically castrated by taking a hormonal treatment designed to suppress his libido.

His criminal record disqualified him from working for a governmental intelligence agency. Disgraced and disenfranchised, he took his own life by cyanide poisoning June 8, 1954, in his home in Manchester. He was 41.

Despite his tragic end, Turing’s legacy as a wartime hero and the father of computer science has lived on, and the British government has attempted to right its past wrongs. In 2009, more than a half century after Turing’s death, then-British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, speaking on behalf of the government, publicly apologized for Turing’s “utterly unfair” treatment. In 2013, Queen Elizabeth II granted Turing a royal pardon.

Featuring him on a £50 bank note marks another milestone. This is the first time that a gay man is featured on a British bank note. It has been welcomed by parts of the LGBTQ community as a symbol of the country facing up to its dark past of the horrific persecution of gay men.

This visionary computer and artificial intelligence pioneer, once criminalized and disgraced, is now widely celebrated. In Turing’s own words from 1949: “This is only a foretaste of what is to come, and only the shadow of what is going to be.”

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A well earned honor. Regardless of if his death was suicide or not, he was taken too soon. If I had an objection it would be that the British government doesn't deserve it given they have in no way made sufficient amends for their treatment of homosexuals during his time.
 
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Yes, the important thing is that he was gay. Not that he was one of the major people responsible for a turning point in the war, nor the fact that he helped kickstart multiple parts of modern computer science. It's that he like the D. It's unfortunate what he was put through because he was gay, but that is not all of who he was. Modern LGBT retards will never understand this. They have to Co-opt everything.
 
Yes, the important thing is that he was gay. Not that he was one of the major people responsible for a turning point in the war, nor the fact that he helped kickstart multiple parts of modern computer science. It's that he like the D. It's unfortunate what he was put through because he was gay, but that is not all of who he was. Modern LGBT retards will never understand this. They have to Co-opt everything.
It's important because he was prosecuted into suicide after basically re-inventing the field of cryptography, and providing immeasurable benefit to the allies with his work, but I guess your insane weirdly aggressive take is also good too.
 
Alan Turing was just one of a handful of people who managed to get me interested in self learning mathematics, so I’m not mad at this

Yes, the important thing is that he was gay. Not that he was one of the major people responsible for a turning point in the war, nor the fact that he helped kickstart multiple parts of modern computer science. It's that he like the D. It's unfortunate what he was put through because he was gay, but that is not all of who he was. Modern LGBT retards will never understand this. They have to Co-opt everything.
The funny thing is that these people love science and math so much, that they’ll try to label everything with a bland dogma that thinks they will stand out more than the people who achieved something that’s worth living for
 
£50 bank notes?
So hardly anybody will see him on the money because you can't get them from an ATM, you have to get them directly from the bank.
Stunning and brave.
 
I vaguely remember doing research projects on him. Research projects where you got to choose your research topic, so I know the younger version of myself found him cool.

I'm cool with him being on a banknote. I just wish him being a nerd was enough to earn him that honor.
 
It's important because he was prosecuted into suicide after basically re-inventing the field of cryptography, and providing immeasurable benefit to the allies with his work, but I guess your insane weirdly aggressive take is also good too.
The main reason he belongs on the note is because of his scientific/mathematical contributions and not because he was gay. A lot of people were involved and while it's inarguable that Turing was brilliant, so were a lot of his colleagues who get next-to-no recognition. The only reason he's even known by most people is because he's gay, I'm convinced.

That said, I don't know how UK faces work on their money but he seems like a great person to celebrate by placing on money.
 
The only reason he's even known by most people is because he's gay, I'm convinced.
I disagree. His work is still taught in schools to this day. His name is on the computer science equivalent of the Nobel prize and has been long before such virtue signaling would be worth it. His theoretical model for computing is the standard for such analysis and has been since it was introduced.
 
The main reason he belongs on the note is because of his scientific/mathematical contributions and not because he was gay. A lot of people were involved and while it's inarguable that Turing was brilliant, so were a lot of his colleagues who get next-to-no recognition. The only reason he's even known by most people is because he's gay, I'm convinced.

That said, I don't know how UK faces work on their money but he seems like a great person to celebrate by placing on money.
I think its the "he died as a disgraced “criminal” part that makes his life story a tad bit more interesting than his colleagues.
 
Some people don't really understand what breaking the Enigma Code was about. That machine was such a magnificent work of German autism, it had 158,962,555,217,826,360,000 different configurations; which is why it was such a pain in the ass to crack through conventional means. The guy who lead the effort and made countless contributions to computer science... but yeah... him liking dick is the most important part.

You were on the wrong side Turing; sure the German didn't suffer degenerates, but they would've given you a quick death, unlike your land of Tea and Crumpets.
 
It's not because he was gay, though the LGBTQP fruitloops will spin it that way. It's because of his tremendous work during the war. I have no issue with Turing being on the £50 note.
 
Yes, the important thing is that he was gay. Not that he was one of the major people responsible for a turning point in the war, nor the fact that he helped kickstart multiple parts of modern computer science. It's that he like the D. It's unfortunate what he was put through because he was gay, but that is not all of who he was. Modern LGBT retards will never understand this. They have to Co-opt everything.
I don't think The Bank of England is part of the modern LGBT, and I don't think they're co-opting him.
 
I disagree. His work is still taught in schools to this day. His name is on the computer science equivalent of the Nobel prize and has been long before such virtue signaling would be worth it. His theoretical model for computing is the standard for such analysis and has been since it was introduced.
He also got a feature film in The Imitation Game
 
The main reason he belongs on the note is because of his scientific/mathematical contributions and not because he was gay. A lot of people were involved and while it's inarguable that Turing was brilliant, so were a lot of his colleagues who get next-to-no recognition. The only reason he's even known by most people is because he's gay, I'm convinced.

That said, I don't know how UK faces work on their money but he seems like a great person to celebrate by placing on money.
Yeah at least it is guy who deserves it .
 
I disagree. His work is still taught in schools to this day. His name is on the computer science equivalent of the Nobel prize and has been long before such virtue signaling would be worth it. His theoretical model for computing is the standard for such analysis and has been since it was introduced.
His work is still taught to the masses? Any computer-related or math program is almost certainly going to mention Turing at some point and likely demonstrate his significance, but I don't think normal people know much about him other than vaguely "Turing machine" and "gay." Though this is from a US perspective, I wouldn't be surprised if he's covered better in the Commonwealth and Europe.
I think its the "he died as a disgraced “criminal” part that makes his life story a tad bit more interesting than his colleagues.
He had some very interesting colleagues and his suicide was never confirmed. It's something speculated on ever since, though I'm not going to argue either way about it. He deserves to be on money if anyone does, I just don't think most people acknowledge his contributions these days and instead see him as a gay man who did great things instead of a great man who was gay.
 
Any computer-related or math program is almost certainly going to mention Turing at some point and likely demonstrate his significance, but I don't think normal people know much about him other than vaguely "Turing machine" and "gay." Though this is from a US perspective, I wouldn't be surprised if he's covered better in the Commonwealth and Europe.
You're right. I should have mentioned still taught in the context of a college computer science major, not in general.
 
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You're right. I should have mentioned still taught in the context of college computer science major, not in general.
The only reason he's remembered is because of his suicide. How many people could name any of the equally important people with equally as important accomplishments at Bletchley Park?
 
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