Read more, comment less. I'm not wrong on the Founders. Read more, comment less. I've spent a lifetime reading and re-reading the many of the best secondary monographs on American colonial history.
"...They set a system in motion that was founded on principals [principles, not principals] that were pointing us toward freedom and justice." This is insipid--- mewling meaninglessness. It is not a refutation of my comment in any way. It's as airy and hollow as a Hallmark greeting card verse. Read the Federalist Papers, particularly Madison. I can also furnish you a long reading list of superb scholarship that will introduce you to the the founder's well-documented wariness of the common rabble. Read more, comment less. Opinions are worthless. Remember that the next time you have one.
"Experts" are great, but what do we do when so many experts disagree? Do we allow the government to choose which experts we can hear, and those whose opinions we're not allowed to hear?" Experts always disagree. When have experts not disagreed? That's what experts do best--disagree. To take your beloved founders as an example, they made a religion of disagreeing with one another.
If you don't like what a certain group of experts are offering, start reading some more. Less commenting, more reading. If you don't subscribe to the prevailing opinions or ideas, read some more so you're able to formulate your own coherent opinions, buttressed by documented facts, not cheaply manufactured propaganda. Read more, comment less.