The new £50 note featuring Alan Turing is coming on 23 June 2021. Find out about its design and security features: https://t.co/nbOlU9kgCU#TheNew50pic.twitter.com/FhPBJAVFP6
— Bank of England (@bankofengland) March 25, 2021
"Hypocritical for the UK government to act so happy you're putting him on a note when you literally chemically castrated him because he was gay," declared one Twitter user, while another wrote, "Glad he's being honoured but we can't forget what happened."
State sanctioned homophobia literally killed Alan Turing. https://t.co/5JIFquDxxD
— Ruth Sangree (@Ruth_Sangree) March 25, 2021
Others complained about Turing being put on an infrequently used bank note that isn't accepted in many shops, and called on the government to ban gay conversion therapy in his honour.
Sure let's put a gay man on a note that isn't accepted in a lot of places oh the bloody irony ๐คฆ๐ป♂️ https://t.co/F3zAxDxIKc
— ๐๐Vincent Van Goth๐ฆ๐ฑ (@gonegal) March 25, 2021
While I’m sure he’d be flattered, I reckon Turing would rather see the Government ban conversion therapy, the (currently legal) form of LGBT torture that he was subjected to before he died in 1954 https://t.co/MBlx03fG6j
— matt horwood (@matthewhorwood) March 25, 2021
The BBC also came under fire for its report on the bank note, with social media users accusing the state-owned news outlet of having "brushed over" Turing's persecution and being loose on the details.
BBC news announces that Alan Turing be the face on a new bank note. Acknowledging he was a brilliant man responsible for breaking the enigma code and inventing the first computer. They avoid detail about the persecution against his sexuality and his chemical castration.#bbcnews
— Lizzy Wicks (@lizzywicks) March 25, 2021
Alan Turing celebrated this morning for his contribution in helping us shorten the 2nd World War they didn't mention he was arrested & prosecuted for homosexual acts chemically castrated as an alternative to prison & less than 2 years later committed suicide BBC obscuring history
— Barbara (@BarbaraSutton15) March 25, 2021
Saw the BBC news report on Alan Turing on the £50 note, hoping for a bit of reflection on how appallingly he was treated for his sexuality and LGBT+ representation in the reportObviously they completely brushed over that aspect of his life, just disappointing but not surprising— Cllr Luke Jeffery ๐ถ๐ณ️๐ (@lukeejeffery) March 25, 2021
Though the BBC did note that Turing was prosecuted for his homosexuality, it did not mention that he was chemically castrated, nor did it speak in detail of his persecution.
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