Apologetics, Republican beliefs, and anti-atheist rhetoric

To @roy and others,

You are painting all of Christianity with the colors of MAGA and Biblicism. Consider these quotes from a 2014 Pew publication:

“… the surveys suggest that the change in views on evolution occurred [in the 4 years between 2009 & 2013] especially among the less religious segments of the GOP. Among Republicans who attend worship services monthly or less often, the share who say humans have evolved over time is down 14 percentage points, from 71% in 2009 to 57% today.”

“Among Republicans who attend services at least weekly the share who believe in evolution has gone from 36% in 2009 to [merely] 31% today…”

“Among Democrats, beliefs in evolution have remained about the same since 2009, irrespective of religiosity.”

“Among Democrats who attend services at least weekly, roughly half say that humans have evolved over time (52% in 2013 vs. 48% in 2009, which is not a statistically significant change). Among Democrats who attend services less often, roughly three-quarters say humans have evolved (75% in 2013, 73% in 2009).”
[End of quotes]

So can you guess who gets alienated the most when atheist scientists start criticizing Evolutionists who are also Christians?