Not really. I posted the central concerns of the founders a while back, noting a scholarly work on the point. Central to the concern was regionalism, which would be a natural consequence of a people divided by what was then a meaningful distance and the unfamiliarity that would bring. And the attitude toward campaigning and politics was far different. In any event, almost all of the initial concerns have been unraveled by technology and what we're left with is a process that from time to time puts a minority into a position of power it hasn't earned else.
The Fathers implied a distrust of pubic opinion solely dictating in just about everything they conceived.
America was, in part, a dumping ground for people who were unwanted in other countries- that's why this country was naturally rebellious (and still in many ways are). Conformity is not a friendly word in America, people are often spastic and arbitrary, and so they made a system that was both democratic and still resisted tyranny of majority.
The EC is part of that system- what you are stating is really just a cop out. Notice that Hillary got her votes largely in places of high infrastructure. There is still a divide, and the Left were planning on leaving them out altogether-
in fact they pretty much forgot they existed. That's why they are in shock that they lost.