In 2014 Scottish voters were urged (by Westminster lobbyists) to reject independence because, amongst other things, an independent Scotland would end up outside the EU. Those statements in that referendum were equally unfounded as the famous ones in the referendum for the UK leaving the EU in 2016. Just about everyone knows that they were wrong and also that still these statements will have persuaded voters in their choice in both referenda. People on here are insisting that, once the voting is done, the die is cast for the longest time possible and that retesting voters opinion is heresy, "undemocratic" and worse. Presumably there is discomfort over the possibility of a reverse wafer thin majority - if the same wafer thin majority again came out on top, surely that would not offend the winners would it ? Would democracy be compromised by following the will of a different majority if it came to light ? What if a majority is more sizeable one way or the other ? Democracy has weaknesses and less than 100% turnout is one, thin majority is another, and there are others (not least a poorly informed, perhaps misinformed, electorate).