stickygirl
All the witches
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2012
- Posts
- 23,237
So in common parlance ( and it is getting late ) a pardon is worth jack-shit. I take your point and thank you. I'll stick to science...
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So in common parlance ( and it is getting late ) a pardon is worth jack-shit. I take your point and thank you. I'll stick to science...
Yes. It was too late for me as well.
All I was trying to say was that agitating for a pardon for anyone who is dead is a waste of effort. It is worthwhile if the person is alive and a pardon would release them from jail. But a pardon means that the person was justly and fairly convicted. (It also means from the UK Government's point of view that the pardoned person cannot sue for wrongful imprisonment.)
If, as a result of an appeal, they are found to have been wrongly convicted, then they are declared innocent. An appeal cannot be lodged for someone who is dead.
No, Nuhuh, Nope!!! It most CERTAINLY is not a waste of time.
It might not do that particular individual much good, but it does wonders for his family and people like him who aren't dead.
There is NO doubt that what the UK government did was unjust and wrong. Just because appeal is an impossibility, that doesn't mean that the wrong should not be righted.
Pardoning those shell-shock victims who were executed for cowardice during the First World War was worthwhile, especially as many communities added their names to the War Memorials.
But why ONLY Alan Turing? If he is to be pardoned postumously, what about all the other gay men (it wasn't a crime to be lesbian in the UK) who were convicted?
Now, nearly 60 years after his suicide from cyanide poisoning at the age of 41, Alan Turing has been officially pardoned by the Queen under the little-known Royal Prerogative of Mercy.
Hodges said:Alan Turing suffered appalling treatment 60 years ago and there has been a very well intended and deeply felt campaign to remedy it in some way. Unfortunately, I cannot feel that such a 'pardon' embodies any good legal principle. If anything, it suggests that a sufficiently valuable individual should be above the law which applies to everyone else
As for the web-filtering - I'm fully behind it. Too many kids have accidental access to pornography and violence: I've been to house where there are three young children and each has access to the internet. I watched the Mum trying to monitor what they are watching and it was like trying to herd cats. We're talking about the internet where nothing is truly hidden and LGBT kids can still have access to appropriate sites, as of course they should. LGBT kids need to find out that their sexuality and identity is not intrinsically linked to the porn industry.
I'm with Andrew Hodges on this:
Tens of thousands of others suffered under the same law. Some are still alive. Lord Sharkey is campaigning for a mass pardon, but now that Turing's has gone through, I suspect it'll be harder to muster enthusiasm.
Meanwhile, the very same UK government has just succeeded in bringing in net filtering which blocks kids in the UK from accessing LGBT support websites. Among the filtering criteria are "LGBT lifestyle"...
Agreed that this will take the air of that balloon and so lets the government off the hook for rescinding sentences on many, many others convicted of homosexuality, but all the same, symbolically the message is loud and clear: that the law was unfair, that as a society we have moved forward.
As for the web-filtering - I'm fully behind it. Too many kids have accidental access to pornography and violence: I've been to house where there are three young children and each has access to the internet. I watched the Mum trying to monitor what they are watching and it was like trying to herd cats. We're talking about the internet where nothing is truly hidden and LGBT kids can still have access to appropriate sites, as of course they should. LGBT kids need to find out that their sexuality and identity is not intrinsically linked to the porn industry.
...and Happy ChristmasTime for this commentator to get out of PJs and embrace the relatives
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Problem is that many ADULTS haven't absorbed that distinction... including the ones who write web filters.
.....
Stickygirl-
The problem with censorship like that is who decides what is filtered?....
I'm not too bothered about 15 yr olds finding porn but what about 10 yr olds and younger?
If a child that age wants to find legitimate LGBT sites are the two sources you mention going to be appropriate anyway? As things stand, they would have to wade through a sea of pornographic images to get there.
The first port of call for a 10yr old is its parents - and I know that is a big problem for a lot of kids, but it is the best route to start with. I know that restriction to information is not ideal, but LGBT kids have problems now despite free access to the web and I don't see how blocking access is going to affect their lives one way or another: there are plenty other sources of information around besides the web.
I say give the filtering a chance: let legitimate sites apply to have restrictions lifted until the system works better.
Better that than throw in the towel before even trying.
But an over zealous censorship will have the reverse effect: regular folks will get pissed off and opt-out. In fact, with the exception of Anglicans and parents of ten year olds, most people will opt out.
Then why any censorship? Why not throw away all moral code?
Why have X-rated horror films,
why not push Miley Cyrus a step further and have her fucking on stage to sell a few more CDs?
Why pursue journalists who hack into the mobile phone of a dead girl?
I agree, the internet is an amazing resource: it has broken down barriers and whilst it let Egyptians communicate what was happening during the crisis in Tahrir square it also fed them the impression that every woman with blond hair was a nymphomaniac whether they were American or British or Dutch journalists.
I just know that if I had children, I wouldn't want them to see images that are all about exploitation and nothing to do with education.
I've been shocked by posts I've seen here on Lit and they are certainly not for children's eyes and hearts, so should Lit be included in that censorship? Of course. Lit's policy bans under 18s - isn't that censorship too?
I'm impressed that you've actually been on a committee advising on censorship.
i) (Considering sites with vile content such as the violation of rights): To be able to block a website they must be aware of it and at least basic details. I understand that legal recourse would take a period of time to shut it down. However the ability is there to monitor traffic and the intention of becoming that traffic and hence prosecute people of guilty of consumning that product and producing said product where possible.
iii) It seems all these features can be provided to a concerned parent to implement within the limitations of their home? Why should this be implemented as a cover-all, opt-out scheme - where you're obliged to register yourself as what essentially is a pale goverment dissidence.
Also, I am personally not aware of the truth when it comes to the almost 100 grams in Denmark. Cause in my ears personally it sounds reasonable crazy. But I have personally heard that comment.