I live in a liberal district in New York City, so my Governor, Senators, Representative, State Senator, State Assemblyman and US Attorney General are Democrats. I am represented by a Republican member of the City Council. The President is obviously a Republican, although I didn't vote for him, and he didn't win my state's electoral votes either. I'll vote against him in the next primary as I did in the last, but my options are relatively limited in terms of stopping Republican politicians.
If you want to talk about what you think is fascist or criminal behavior, that's fine. Your point that I don't talk about that stuff is that when it comes up in replies to my posts it tends to be changing the topic. Whatever you think of Russian collusion is unrelated to whether homeopathic medicine should be covered by national health insurance, declining life expectancy in the US, or immigration policy circa 2012.
I'm here mainly to get a sense of what people who have different experiences and views than I do think, to develop my understanding and kind of stress-test what I'm thinking. You ask "how does discussing this with you do anything to prevent your party from engaging in racist, fascist, criminal behavior?" but if I wasn't participating in these discussions, it wouldn't have any effect on the Republican party.
On the question of what civility has gotten you guys, that does require you guys to be particularly civil, which hasn't occurred.
This would require every claim of racism to be accurate, which just isn't the case.
The poll on Republican voters isn't about officeholders or wannabe officholders like Kobach. These are two different categories of people. Kobach and many officeholders are probably afraid of getting Trump's ire and the base's ire at a time when they want to close ranks.