I don't think we have any serious, genuine alt-right members. Josef k was a weird outlier.
Granted I haven't been here long, but I agree. I don't pick up that kind of presence here - but then again, my conception of alt-right might be limited. I think of it as a bit of a blanket label for the kind of outliers you mentioned (all the kek/pepe stuff, some/most of the conspiracy culture, actual supremacists, MAGA, QAnon, troll stuff, bleeding into incel territory, etc).
Does anyone here have a different understanding of what alt-right means, or who it refers to? It does seem to be a wildly heterogeneous bunch that fall outside the margins of the mainstream right (although arguably not, as of late). How has the right shifted in respect to the alt-right? Or has it, much?
Can we take the RNC as an appeal to the right, as opposed to the alt-right? Or has Trump actually enfranchised the alt-right enough to have them included in the target demographic? It may seem obviously, but worth a thought nonetheless.
Anyway, I don't see more than crypto-traces of that stuff here, intentionally or unintentionally - in my statements as well. Arguably, a lot of it might just be frustration with the excesses of cultural revisionism ("cancel culture"), which is, as far as I'm concerned, a perfectly reasonable frustration. I don't think it indicates bigotry or hatefulness - but I don't want to speak for everyone.
It might depend on whether or not one radically identifies with this frustration. That might be the ultimate distinction between alt-right, and critical-of-woke left. Coming from the left, I think this frustration has to be acknowledged, rather than repressed out of fear of cancellation, in the interest of... what? Individuation? Integration of the daemonic? In a less metaphysical sense, this acknowledgement might also be necessary to move forward, politico-ideologically.
Could it just be that we find ourselves in a stretch of rapids along the psychic energy river? Stretches switching between calm and excited?