Tell me why, in a democratic vote, the majority decision should be reversed,
Because people change their minds.
without pissing from a great height all over the concept of democracy itself
Democracy is not having a vote and then being done with it.
without explicitly or implicitly invoking "Waaaaagh I don't like it".
So when the Tories win elections, the people who oppose them afterwards are invoking "Waaaagh I don't like it" are they?
I'm all ears.That's news to me. I must have dozed off and missed that.
If you are going to debate politics, you really need to be better informed about recent political history. Or is it just that that particular Labour government did things you don't like (and got re-elected twice while doing them) so you are saying "waaaaagh I don't like it".
Who does?
Many many Labour supporters did.
is to accept it and get on with it on those precious few and rare occasions that we're allowed to exercise it, because for the most part we aren't. Generally we appoint people that we think will do our bidding who either never believe in the first place or who quickly forget that they are the servants and we are the masters, not vice versa.
Democracy is not just voting once and then declaring it done. Democracy is - or should be - a continuous process. Nobody who voted in that referendum knew as much as we all know now.
The colonials have an amusing thing about it, I think the youngsters call it a meme: http://tinyurl.com/y9qccjgh
That's pretty immature isn't it - hurling insults at people exercising their democratic rights. People in a democracy who disagree with the majority decision have every right to voice their disagreement. If you don't allow that, you do not have a democracy, you have mob rule.