Maybe, but you are still talking about each little thing in isolation. People are just bad at answering these kinds of questions. If you ran things based on what people say they want, you'd crash the economy. In as much as it has any meaningful existence, the "will of the people" is wildly incoherent in what it wants, has a memory of about 5 minutes, can maybe hold 2 things in it's head at once and has never read a book.
Also, your framing of the questions is fundamentally progressive.
You're making some pretty broad judgments about the entire population. If you think "the will of the people" is "wildly incoherent," maybe you think there shouldn't be elections at all. Maybe the Kochs should just appoint a ruling council. Would you be okay with that?
And I don't use "progressive" as a sneer. "Would you pay higher taxes for better services?" is a straightforward proposition. And that's way before you get to the fact that our current tax codes and enforcement favor the wealthy in ways we haven't seen since the Golden Age.
off. The actual philosophy behind those self-evident truths were argued and debated and took quite a while to be understood before actually being adopted. If anything, those "truths" are a great example of reason and rational thought, especially the parts deconstructing the sovereignty of royal birthright.