Should we give a damn what users think?
No, If a post doesn't cross the line into misbehavior we shouldn't care about the poster's underlying attitude.1
Every user is allowed to have some attitude, either bad/good, quiet/vibrant, passionate/laid back. What does matter is the quality of the post. That should be the first thing to worry about. After that you might check on the user to make sure the interactions between the user and the community are in the spirit of the be-nice policy.
It really shouldn't matter if this is the first or the tenth account/sock puppet as long as the posts are original work and no interaction between the accounts take place. Advising the user to not make comments about the down votes is helpful, maybe flag as too chatty. If you have a down-voted post yourself use it as an example to show that everybody now and then picks up down votes. (You're free to use one of my down voted answers or questions if you don't have one).
There is not much more you can do than helping out with a few edits to show what a quality post should look like or asking in a comment to edit in extra information, maybe find a good example post. If the user doesn't appreciate that and doesn't seem to pick-up all the guidance given, simply move on. Don't get frustrated or get lured into an argument with individuals that assume all their work is done by us.
Sometimes I redirect those users to sites where (community) moderation is less strict or absent. Quora and Yahoo Answers spring to mind.
The rage-quitting (or the speculation of going down that route) is used by such users as a form of power-play. If you give in to such power-play you basically lost and the user did win. The next time you might be giving in more easily and in the end you quit as well. That would be a greater loss to the community and overall quality than just losing users that are not ready yet for the professional and enthusiastic nature of Stack Overflow.
1. phrases taken from a comment by StoneyB and answer from TRomano