How so? Again, if one is going to claim that it's undemocratic, provide your definition of democracy. I've given mine already, and mine has the advantage of being the actual definition.
That's funny. What was your definition -- "power to the masses"? Yet, as SGM pointed out, you have a minority (by virtue of geography) thwarting the masses.
After not only failing to consistently follow your own definition, it's amusing you would maintain an idiosyncratic view contra virtually everyone arguing against you when words generally mean what people think they mean. These terms are socially constituted (and their meanings can change between ancient Athens and modern D.C.).
Just to illustrate how out of touch your view is, the people who want to keep the system as it is almost always argue that the holy Framers did not
intend create a democracy (and this is where people abuse another term, parroting the line "we're a republic, not a democracy"). In other words, there's broad-agreement by ideological foes on what democracy means.
In the US especially, there's an abiding belief that democracy entails the one person, one vote principle (popularized by Chief Justice Earl Warren in the sixties when states malapportioned districts).
No, a critical component of the democracy YOU want is political equality. That doesn't mean that it's a fundamental of the concept.
Except it's not really a normative claim. It's democratic theory 101. Read Robert Dahl.
The only sensible way to argue against this application of democratic principles is to invoke the principles of federalism, not redefine what democracy means. Of course that would mean a battle of ideas rather than semantics.