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Technically, as they were Voted into Office by Senators representing the interests Voters, they are democratically elected via Representative Democracy.
I guess if you change the definition of "democratically elected," then sure. Supreme Court Justice is an appointed position. It's literally the entire point of the distinction between the two (elected vs. appointed).
If you were to consider anyone appointed by an elected official as being "democratically elected," then that would mean that nobody is appointed. It would become a distinction without a difference.
So... are they appointed by the President without anyone having any say or is there a vote? If there is a vote by an elected body like the senate or congress, then they are democratically chosen.
Congress doesn't pick or vote from a set of candidates.. Essentially they are just confirming appointments, just like the appointed cabinet members and most other appointed positions.
Not relevant. And they can pick from whomever the President puts forward. I know because I asked Merrick Garland and Neil Gorsuch.
Pretty creative, I guess. Unfortunately for you, words have meanings, and you are objectively wrong about what you believe those meanings to be. The term "political appointment" is a term that is already defined in US politics, and it refers to government positions that are obtained by appointment (usually, if not always, by someone who WAS elected). Period. Those people are not elected officials no matter what weird reasoning you might come up with. That is the entire point of the distinction between the two terms.
Report by researchers from Princeton and Northwestern universities suggests that US political system serves special interest organisations, instead of voters
And that is relevant to my statement, how?