CHRIS SEARLE recommends a work of love and deep admiration for a great musician
We don’t need your biofuel: how discrimination can hamper scientific research of global significance
Amy Ekins-Coward
When my wife and I first met, she told me
"This is my PhD, and
someday, my work will likely take me away –
abroad,
you know?"
Sure. So, there she was –
Chemical Engineering, Marine Biology crossover
– pretty unique, no? Developing
biofuel, no more worthy a cause that I know
and soon we were close
to her viva, to the rest of our lives
but
when she passed (minor corrections only,
no small feat), we sought out
where we ought to go,
she for work, with me in tow;
and while her colleagues span a globe,
chose money, sunshine, opportunity,
we began to see her atlas close.
No same-sex visa means no me,
means here’s a person
who could literally change the world,
who could bring forward the potential
for a viable, affordable, alternative fuel, but
hey – your government disagrees with these
sexualities, identities.
Think
of all the progress going unmade
because you are excluding two percent
of the candidates.
"Sure, we could cure cancer
but Andersson’s a queer
we don’t want him over here, and
yes Aitkins could be valuable too but
what can we do when she just won’t screw
the right way?"
RICHARD SHILLCOCK examines an enjoyable, but philosophically conventional book, and urges Marxists to employ their capacity to embrace the totality in any explanation
TONY FOX invites readers to come and hear the story of the remarkable Liverpudlian International Brigader Alexander Foote
by Widad Nabi
The Labour Party proposal to scrap benefits for those unable to work will be debated in Parliament next Tuesday, and threatens the most vulnerable in our society. ALAN MORRISON presents some responses in poetry


