Most here would agree that a man has a right to self-defense and to defend of those who are in immediate or imminent harm. For detailed analysis of this principle and how it relates to when and whether a person has a God-given right to break the law, I completely defer to the beautifully-crafted
"Vigilanteism Worksheet" created by Bob Enyart and published at the American Right to Life website.
In a nutshell, it explains in detail how in various situations that involve harm or imminent harm, there is necessarily an escalation of threat and response to threat. For example, if someone is on trial for murder, and you are a witness against them, and in court, while restrained, the criminal looks at you and says "When I get out of prison, I'll kill you!" do you have the right to pull out a gun and shoot him in the head? Of course not. The threat is not imminent. And when possible, you must go through a process of escalating your response according to the severity and immediacy of the threat. If that man gets out of prison, and tells a bartender that he intends to kill you, that is more immediate. However, you still don't have the right to go to his house and shoot him in the head. You should notify the police. And then go home and clean your gun.
Numerous examples are given in the worksheet, working through many detailed scenarios to show how a violent or lethal response is warranted in some of them but not others. There are cases where there is no escalation, but the only thing to be done is immediate, violent or even lethal force. There is a time for that.
Now, I would assert that these principles apply to this question of the day. After all, if we simply have a difference of opinion on some bureaucratic principle of how some agency is governed in Washington D.C., does that give us the right to march into their federal office with a gun and tell them to change it? Everybody with me -- "Of course not!" We all know that.
So, where is that line? I would assert that there is an escalation, just as on the individual level, and that, in fact, it starts
at the individual level. It is a matter of self-defense.
Jesus made it clear (though not everyone here will agree but I consider that a separate debate) that if the gov't taxes us, we must submit to that rule of law. The existence of a tax, in and of itself, is appropriate. The degree or severity of the tax may or may not be administered justly.
What about physical threats? If a federal officer/agent comes to your door and threatens to harm your family, you certainly have a right to defend your family with up to lethal force. That pertains to your family and your home. If you see your neighbor facing imminent physical danger in the same way, you also have the right to defend them, in the same way. But, these are anecdotal situations.
So, what happens when it becomes systematic? That is when the practice of self-defense likewise becomes systematic. If you have a gang of criminals, for example, and they are attackiing your whole neighborhood, and there is
no recourse with the police, such that they refuse to act, you certainly can organize your whole neighborhood so that you have a systematic practice of self-defense in the community.
If it is the government physically attacking your whole neighborhood, or community, the same principle therefore would apply. Systematic self-defense against a systematic threat.
All of this begs the question -- are we there yet, in America? No. The step-by-step process of escalation of force has not reached that point, definitely not. We still have peaceful means to change our country, and we have avenues of redress within the system, as well. Are there corruptions in the system? Absolutely. But we have not lost all ability to peacefully and politically seek redress.
If we lose all ability to seek redress peacefully and politically,
and if the government then starts to systematically abuse its citizens physically, that is the point at which systematic self-defense will come into play. We are not there yet. There are incidents when agents of the government abuse their position, or employ unjust policies to limited degrees. However, the government isn't dragging whole classes of people into the streets, kidnapping thousands of people to press them into slavery, etc. (By the way, those things were occurring leading up to the American Revolution, and without getting too deeply into historical detail, I hold that this is why our nation was justified in rebelling and breaking free of unjust imperial British rule. And rather than start a tangent debate on
that topic, I will add that if I were ever shown that there was not sufficient cause for the colonies to rebel, I would have no problem changing my mind and agreeing that they should not have done so. I would still stand on the principles above. After all, our ultimate loyalty should be to God before our nation. Right and wrong comes first.
Might that day be coming? Yes, it might. We are currently moving in that direction, and I don't have a lot of hope that this process will reverse. But there is always some hope.