US politics was intentionally designed such that the majority doesn't get its way. It's the single major innovation in liberal political philosophy in the past 500 years.
Saying "it's not democratic!" isn't a useful comment.
Here's a sampling of the top comments in this thread:
* "protesting is virtually impossible"
* "The law making process is so clearly broken"
* "society will be warped into some dysfunctional dystopian end game"
* "the US doesn't have enough accountability for its leaders"
* "digital technology delivering us a single party state"
* "Dystopian police state here we come"
* "protest has been criminalized. The people who protested Trump's inauguration are facing what amounts to life in federal prison."
Which are all just elaborate ways of crying "I don't like this bill. It must be unfair!".
I'm gonna break something to you: it's not unfair. Stop being an immature baby.
Republicans control the House, the Senate, and the Presidency. That's a result of multiple successful midterm elections and the recent presidential election.
If you don't like this bill, go vote for someone else in November instead of offering your elaborate theories of how US politics is "fundamentally broken" because you didn't get your way.
There are existing answers to these questions. It's not a grand mystery.
Instead of merely repeating the questions, you should explain why the answers to those questions are wrong.
I think you're overly consumed with the political dramas of the present and haven't really thought through questions about what a good system of governance looks like.
Sometimes it's very small.
And often in favor of women.