So you:
1. admit you were wrong, and I was right
2. make up some baseless nonsense about me
3. give me homework, as if I didn't just school you
How about no?
I think you might be over-reacting a bit in your response. Rereading the sub-thread, to me at least (i.e., IMO), Tokugawa was not talking about now, but stating worst case scenario responses that may have to be made to a completely corrupt government. We're not there (yet). People don't have to resort to pulling their pistols. Courts mostly work, and where they don't, as a society, we're at a point where we don't care enough, or it's not important enough to us, to respond with violence to protect our rights.
We always talk about lines in the sand here, where everyone has their own about when to get sporty. People are fat and happy and chillin' with Netflix, so as a society we're a long way from "Unintended Consequences". If someday, under President Cortez, our courts start to turn into University sexual assault tribunals, either laying low and staying under the radar, or taking up arms for our rights and freedoms, may be the choices. Or just going along with the new status quo, which plenty of other societies have done.
Courts and (US) government work to protect our constitutional rights until they don't. Then we can appeal and win, or appeal and lose. Then we can accept that result or not. However, as the very last resort, when everything else has failed, how else to protect your unalienable rights (besides flying under the radar) other than with a fight?