Would you kill Alan Turning ?

Would I kill a hyperintelligent white man who was gaslit into homosexuality?

Yes.

That was an electromechanical computer that never served a function. Its arguable whether it technically worked at all.

Turing created the concept of the modern programmable computer.
Which was then used to create the first electronic computer (using thermionic valves) which was used to crack the German enigma codes, and later Russian encryption. Colossus worked from 1940 to 1970 in a vital capacity. Which is far longer than most computers run today.

No one in science is indispensable. Behind every great name you know are half a dozen who were going to invent the exact same thing mere months later. The idea that you absolutely need one faggot or all of computer science comes crashing to a halt is absurd

These anons get it. There will probably always be an undercurrent of degeneracy in any given society. It's just how humanity works. However, as long as that degeneracy is socially unacceptable and punished severely, it will stay deep underground and its impact will be extremely limited. This is how the vast majority of human societies worked until we entered clown world in the 20th century. Once we return to such a model, most geniuses will be smart enough to focus on their work instead of flaunting their degeneracy, and so society will be able to benefit from their work while not being harmed by their flaws.

That is very true. Although it doesnt really address my post at all.

Tommy Flowers built colossus. He was never allowed to talk about it due to the official secrets act.
Turing invented the concept, but Flowers put it in to practice. Inventing many of the features and concepts of the modern computer as he went. They did the entire thing in the space of a couple of years, with a war on. Standing in 2 feet of water in their worshop.

Flowers went on to work in the US on stuff like ENIAC. But he was never allowed to tell his story until very recently.

3. He didn't made his achievements because he was a homo. It didn't make his research any better in any circumstance.