I don't think we're seeing the fall of democracy, but rather the fall of the modern republican party.
It may sound extreme, but I think there is a bit of truth in the assertion that we may be losing grasp on our democracy.
We live in a representative democracy, and I think there are a few facets there that are slipping for a few reasons. A representative democracy, to me, is more than just electing a guy who believes what you believe and would do exactly as you do or as you want. There's far more to it than that. I think, honestly, our founding fathers didn't have an enormous amount of faith in every voters' opinion, and, quite frankly, neither do I. You're never going to get a perfectly educated population. It's simply not possible. So that's where representatives come in. They're supposed to be smarter than us, and they're supposed to make the decisions for us as a whole, and for society and its well-being as a whole. Along those lines they're supposed to come back and open another line of communication to us. It isn't supposed to be just the tea party or whatever fringe group dictating "you do this or else we won't vote for you." I mean sure representing your constituents' views is a part of the equation, but I think it's more than that. A representative is supposed to come back and say why maybe those things won't work if they truly won't. They're supposed to be a sort of educator to their constituents, too. They should come back to their states or whatever it is they represent and say "this is what we accomplished, and this is why it helps you, and this is why it helps all of us as a whole." They're supposed to say "elect me, because I made this society we have better by being a representative, because of these things."
I don't think we have that anymore. It's turned into a game. To pull up the most obvious and probably overused example in Obamacare, we have representatives railing against it not because it's something they actually think hurts society or hurts their constituents. I'll admit maybe some do, but as a whole the Republican party cannot believe this, because it's something they supported and even created. When you have one of the only two major parties we have wholesale running against something purely because the other "team" put it into affect, and they don't want to give credit, then I think we've lost something crucial. Instead of steady progress brought about by representatives that truly represent their constituents best interest we've got a literal, real life game of thrones. They care more about their seat than who they represent. They care more about their own future longevity as a party/organization than our society.
Along with that game, the republicans are playing another game. That's the game of voter suppression. They realize in order for their "team" to win they need to hush the voices of those dissenting from their view. We have record states putting in voter ID laws, and in some cases even brazenly admitting why. We have Ohio screwing around with early voting, and even now saying we
" shouldn’t contort the voting process to accommodate the urban — read African-American — voter-turnout machine." Read that again. We shouldn't change our voting process to accommodate a large block of our voters? This is blatantly game playing. This isn't representative democracy. This guy is supposed to represent those people, and he's saying in plain language that he shouldn't contort to what they want.
The media in this country is increasingly afraid to actually do its job, for fear of being called partisan. Things can, at best, be reported as a he said she said sort of event no matter where the truth actually lies. The only part of the media actually calling either side out on their wrongs are the already extremely partisan pundits who would call out the other side no matter whether its true or not anyway. We've got one of the largest news organizations in this country that is literally a propaganda machine for one of the sides, and another large news organization trying to copy that format because it makes money.
We've also got a society getting increasingly more unequal by the minute, and along side that we have the opening up of the political process to that very money. You'd be crazy to think Mitt Romney cares what even a hundred thousand of you think compared to one Sheldon Adelson. Why? Because he can just take that money and misinform 100,000 other people, or just convince those same ones they're wrong using a huge propaganda machine. Look at Romney's blatantly false welfare ad for proof.
On top of all that, we've got another party, the Democrats, that seems to simply exist to try and stop the regression. They're not representatives anymore. They're the proverbial finger in the dike trying to stop the overwhelming tied. They're putting up and having to defend Republican policies from years ago, likely not because they think that's what's best for their constituents ultimately, but because
that's the best we can do right now. And that's not even mentioning the continuance of some of the bad Bush-esque policies and far more corporate friendliness than most on the actual left would actually want.