The Greek issue is a lot more complicated than you would think. A combination of borrowing, tax evasion, corruption and 'creative accounting'. Worse some EU countries are doing very nicely out of it, with reduced interest payments more than offsetting the loans. Reality is Greece should never have been allowed to join the Euro.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_government-debt_crisisAs to it being over, with the vote. If a government official says, well you voted for Brexit, your new tax level is double, and your pension is cancelled, well you voted for it! Would you just be grateful or have an unholy row? The referendum was the start, not the finish. We still don't know what is going to happen. Things change, something that looks really good one day might, a couple of years later, turn out to be a can of worms you don't want to open. Problem is they didn't install any emergency brake. Lord Kerr on why he wrote Article 50, "In Britain there was, among Eurosceptics, the theory that one was tied to one’s oar with no escape and rowing to the unknown destination of ever-closer union. That Eurosceptic theory was always nonsense because you don’t need a secession article to secede. If you stop paying your subscription, stop attending the meetings, people would notice that you’d left.”
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/article-50-design-dictators-not-uk-eu-european-lisbon-treaty-author-lord-kerr-a7655891.htmlhttp://uk.businessinsider.com/britain-does-not-need-to-trigger-article-50-to-leave-the-eu-2016-11Which brings me back to what Egg said earlier about who believes politicians, seems a lot of people did. The very resentment came from propaganda spread by politicians and news agencies. This didn't just start when Cameron announced the referendum, it's been simmering away inside the Tory and Labour parties for decades. His hope was that a remain vote would shut the Brexiteers up and glue his party together again, that was never going to work. It's just nobody was stupid enough to bet the future of our country on a referendum because of outdated ideals going back to colonial Britain.
As Egg said a large part of the vote was because of resentment towards the Conservatives, not the EU. The EU are going to try to make as much of it as they can, regardless of us staying in or leaving. Cameron, rather than jumping off the side of HMS Great Britain, should have gone back to the EU and said, "look, this is the situation, what are you do to make it easier for me to have another one?"
Sovereignty, democracy and power, are things I have heard banded out far too often, you don't get any, I don't get any. All the power stays at the top unless they agree to dribble a little down, and it will never reach you. Mostly those at the top suck it up and it stays there, same with money.