Now that it's the weekend and I'm allowed to have my own thoughts.
As someone who lives and breathes sci-fi, I spend a lot of time thinking about political theory; how would you run a Galactic Empire? What would a utopian Federation actually look like? How would you explain democracy to someone from, say, Westeros, or Katolis, or Pharaonic Egypt, or Sengoku-era Japan? I think I've come to realize something about democracy.
Democracy is like a table, built to stand on four legs: Education, a Free Media, Infrastructure, and the Rule of Law. Without one of those legs, the table wobbles. Without two, it will collapse.
In fact, I'd go so far as to say that, if you have those four pillars, a society will tend toward democracy inevitably. If the population is educated, well-informed, organized, and able to trust in some form of justice, they will demand an equal voice. This is why attempts to "establish" or "declare" a democracy always collapse: you can't just install a beloved leader and walk away; the whole government will eventually collapse (leading to the rise of a demagogue).
When it comes right down to it, a democracy is actually the ultimate evolution of a monarchy: one in which the entire population is royalty. "Voter" is just another word for the nobility, because that's what nobles do; they (alone) get a vote on what the king actually does. Democracy is just the idea that "nobleman," "citizen," and "person" should all mean the same thing. If a democratic state is a nation of kings and queens, then we should look at what kings and queens need.
We like to say that there's a price to be paid to live in a "Free Country," an idea often used to justify military adventurism and increasingly militarized law enforcement, but that doesn't actually contribute to democracy. All it does --at best-- is to defend the physical borders of the state; it has nothing to do with what goes on in the state.
The price is this:
A citizen in a democracy must be educated.
A citizen in a democracy must be well-informed.
A citizen in a democracy must have access to social infrastructure (i.e., the physical ability to vote).
A citizen in a democracy must be protected by the law.
You'll notice that none of these "prices" are paid by the citizen; they are the responsibility of the state, if it wants to defend its own survival.
What we're seeing right now in the USA is the result of a deliberate, generations-long attack on these four pillars, and thus on the idea of democracy itself. A small band of wealthy and powerful oligarchs have repeatedly taken steps to gut the education system, subvert the free press, suborn and discredit the Supreme Court, and sabotage election infrastructure.
The "billionaire donors" are, by any description, the nobility of America, and they are trying to install a monarchy that they alone will have full control of. In order to do that, they have to shrink the voting class until it includes only them. By defunding public education, eliminating the Fairness Doctrine, disenfranchising voters and discrediting the electoral system, and subverting the Supreme Court, they have removed the tools that citizens need in order to participate in democracy, and thus turned those citizens into something else.
So what do you call someone who doesn't get access to education, knowing only superstition and folk wisdom? Who lacks accurate and detailed information and must rely on rumour and hearsay? Who doesn't have a way to make their voice heard? Who lives in fear of arbitrary laws that are wielded like weapons by the powerful?
In a monarchy, those are "commoners."