It feels ridiculous to promote a music video today. It feels like
September 12.

I could put this off for another day. After I've become more used to the
idea of living in a new fascist age. But that's just the thing isn't it?
We all get used to it. We scroll through our feeds. We're all so busy.
(Those camps are nothing like *those* camps.)

Yesterday, when the news started to turn for the worse, I closed all
news sites and went for a walk. There was just no way he could win, so I
didn't want to agonise over fluctuating results trickling in. Better to
just see her victory speech at the end.

In a park, I sat by a pond and watched the water. Heinz, a close friend,
messaged to ask if I was okay. He told me it was all over. People were
still walking hand-in-hand, laughing, taking selfies, scrolling through
their feeds. I watched the pond and cried.

When something this horrible happens, the progressive left usually
respond with calls for compassion and perseverance. "If we all work
together..." etc. There is a stubborn optimism (the same stubborn
optimism that said he could never win). But I just feel heartbroken. The
US president-elect is a psychopath, and there is a very real possibility
that he will destroy everyone we know and love within his years in
office. Let that sink in.

But then there's the heartbreak at the banal cruelty of humanity. That
people allowed such bottomless hatred to govern them. When you see a
stranger, you need to believe that that person shares the same interior
humanity as you — this person, like you, could not identify their
support with a monster. Yesterday we all lost that.

I keep wondering what it was like when this happened in Germany. When
their chancellor was appointed did people use the word "evil" to
describe him, or did that only come after? Now it is after. We have
hindsight.

If you feel like how I feel, then hit reply (I've moved this list from
TinyLetter to MailChimp so you can reply directly). Like me, you
probably don't want to hear how we can fix this in four years. Maybe you
want to hear someone else say, "I understand, this is really, truly
horrible."

Good luck.

SECRET DECODER are premiering the video I made for the Lawrence
English/Jamie Stewart (Xiu Xiu) collaboration HEXA, for the track
"Lumber".[1]

	...simply but effectively dropping you in a sensory depravation
	tank of sorts. The seemingly bleak sounds are full of subtlety
	and varied textures, while the video equally balances curious
	serenity with jarring austerity.

You can buy the album Factory Photographs on vinyl or download on the
ROOM40 Emporium.


-- 
[1] https://www.secretdecoder.net/video/2016/11/09/video-premiere-hexa-lumber/