You and your generation voted, a welcome first step but it is only a first step. If you want a future voting isn't enough. You need to decide what you want and organise to get it. You have to put up with the setbacks and carry on through the bad times as well as the good. That would be true whether we are in the EU or out of it. I've seen rights my parents and grandparents politically fought for taken away from young people over the past four decades and your generation have more or less accepted it.
How many demonstrations in Hull have been organised for decent and affordable housing for young people? Same for jobs? What about the right to get benefits if you're 16 and unemployed? Same for zero hour contracts and apprenticeships with a guaranteed job at the end of it. If you want a decent world you have to organise and campaign for it, not just vote. If you do that you may find people you can elect that will stand up for your future and mean it. Most of them, hopefully, will be a lot younger than me.
They are going to have to get the younger generation off their arses and off social media. At the moment it is too much effort to put a cross on a bit of paper for a lot of them, 43% of young people didn't vote in this referendum apparently.
When I'm retired and have nothing else to do than waste my time arguing with strangers on the internet we can 'engage in discussions' until the cows come home, until then I'm off to enjoy life.