In all cases I remember there is either
- an overwhelming disagreement with the proposal and the [status-declined] tag simply gets added by a diamond user (moderator or community manager, or sometimes just an employee with the diamond). There usually are plenty of comments/answers explaining the reasoning and no new info would be added by an "official" reply.
- a positively received feature request gets either a long comment or a complete answer. Indeed there is a good chance that the declination to implement a popular feature is not received well and is not marked as an accepted answer.
In this particular case the answer by Shog9 (who worked for Stack Overflow at that time) sits with -17 (+19/-36) votes and explains the official position of the company.
If you find a [status-declined] post without such information - asking a question on meta for that specific case as you did with this question would likely be the fastest route to get the information. Even if a CM took the time to answer, it is likely someone from community will be able to find/remember the reason.
On bringing the same FR up again:
It is generally acceptable to bring up the same feature-request again, but it needs to address why the decline reason is no longer applicable and why the feature is still important.
In this particular case I see at least two areas that need to be addressed:
- how the proposed feature interacts with existing voting (how often you can vote, aging of the flags/votes) and particularly review cases where abuse of the system may happen. There are plenty of cases of close/reopen wars recently, and clarifying that the proposed feature would not make those more frequent can definitely help the cause.
- why do we still need this. The only somewhat useful case is to switch any other close reason to the duplicate (as really there are only two: "off-topic" and "on-topic but duplicate" close reasons) and that can be done relatively easily by a gold tag badge holder without any extra work...