That's a shitty way to look at a democracy if you ask me.
Isn't what you're doing here is basically lamenting that people you disagree with have the same vote as you?
They "disagree" about things that are factually incorrect.
They blame Obama for the deficit despite congress controlling practically all aspects of monetary/fiscal policy, including revenues and expenses. Every one of obama's proposed budgets has called for more revenues AND less expenses than the ones congress has passed.
They violate the spirit of the 1st amendment by basing their political views and votes on how "Christian" they perceive a politician to be (You can't preserve religious freedom if your Christianity is used as a litmus test to give you the political power to govern. Because then you have only christian perspectives in government, and only those loyal to christianity with their policies can be allowed to enact policy.).
They scream bloody murder and nearly riot at the prospect of government regulating health care, because they see it as unconstitutional by virtue of omission (despite the 9th and 14th amendments allowing the federal government to recognize personal rights through the judiciary and the legislature, and requiring all levels of government to recognize any right recognized by the federal government). Yet at the same time, if the government were to dissolve the air force or merely slash funding, they would scream bloody murder, despite the concept of an air force not existing at the time of the constitution's drafting, and never being inserted into the constitution.
They complain about obama's "radical" pastor while AT THE SAME TIME calling him a communist and a muslim.
They are convinced of mass voter fraud in spite of all evidence to the contrary, and they want to protect people's rights to vote by enacting a policy which would legally prevent millions of people from exercising their right to vote.
They do not even understand the separation of powers properly (Remember how the tea partiers wanted the House of Representatives to be given the task of constitutional review/justification for legislature? That demonstrates a fundamental conflation of the roles of the judiciary and legislature. Obviously Congress should have some common sense understanding of the constitution so they don't waste everyone's time passing unconstitutional legislation, but that's completely different than requiring every bill be constitutionally justified and cited as a matter of parliamentary procedure for the legislature).
And no amount of logic, reasoning, or facts can convince them otherwise.