Brett Stevens is awhite supremacist andneo-Nazi blogger.[1] He edits the blogAmerika.org, afar-right site that describes itself as a "more extreme" version of the neo-Nazi forumIron March and which helped facilitate the LD50 conference. Stevens inspired and expressed admiration forAnders Breivik, thefar-right terrorist who killed 77 people in Norway in 2011.

Stevens edits the blogAmerika.org, a far-right site that has described itself as "ult-right".[2] Some time after the neo-Nazi forumIron March was shut down (its users had been linked to several murders and also to terrorist groups[2]), an unknown source leaked user information from the site, including email addresses. Stevens used the leaked emails to reach out to former Iron March users in 2019, suggesting that, "If you liked the Iron March forum, you might findAmerika.org to be even more extreme.... We are Nietzschean, pro-Western, and anti-egalitarian. While our approach is more traditionalist than National Socialist, it is uncompromising."[2]
The Daily Dot describedAmerika.org as a site preoccupied withrace, promoting the establishment of acaste system, the expulsion of US citizens to their ancestors' countries, the end of global immigration and trade, and support of what the site terms a "new hierarchy" that places a small number of people at the top of society.[2]The Daily Dot described the website's writing as "long-winded and nonsensical".[2]
Amerika.org is described as being among a number ofalt-right sites that "fusedeep ecology with explicit white supremacy", taking concerns about species extinction and habitat loss and relating them to thewhite genocide conspiracy theory and a purported replacement of indigenous white people with invasive foreigners.[3]
Stevens presented a talk titled "The Black Pill" at the 2016 LD50 arts conference in London and helped promote and gatekeep the event onAmerika.org. The title of Stevens' talk references the term used inmanosphere and anti-feminist circles inspired from the term inThe Matrix. In these contexts, "the red pill" means accepting truth of these ideologies, beyond which Stevens drew a further boundary with "The Black Pill", describing this further pill as rejection of every possibility of "illusion" and "positive action" in a manner amounting to totalnihilism. Stevens presented alongside Iben Thranholm,VDARE founderPeter Brimelow, Mark Citadel, andneo-reactionaryNick Land.[4][5]
Anders Breivik, the far-right terrorist who murdered 77 inattacks in Norway in 2011, described Stevens' writings as inspirational. Following the attacks, Stevens wrote about Brevik, "I am honored to be so mentioned by someone who is clearly far braver than I, no comment on his methods, but he chose to act where many of us write, think and dream."[5][4]