Justifying resistance to any government, regardless how that government is put in place, requires resort to principles that precede the existence of any government. If one resorts to such principles, resistance even to a democratically elected government that has broken no law and violated no constitution can be justified. For example, assume one principle preceding the existence of any government is that a person has a right to private property, and that one should be protected by the state in the enjoyment of that property. Now, assume a President elected by a majority, a majority of the legislature properly elected and aligned with that government, and a judiciary that supports that government. With that alignment, it is quite possible for a government to so eviscerate private property as to make the concept virtually meaningless. At some point along the continuum toward such evisceration, a person is morally justified in resisting. People may differ as to where along the continuum justification arises. And that is where Argentina finds itself today -- somewhere along that continuum. For example, the capital controls in place since November 2011 destroy private property, by preventing someone who has worked for years and saved to create capital from protecting that capital by purchasing Dollars (thus exposing the capital to sure erosion through inflation). Is that enough to justify resistance? Most would probably say no. Well, how about confiscatory taxation of second homes (e.g., a recurring 25% tax on the value of a summer house in Mar del Plata)? That could happen in Argentina. Is that enough? There are numerous other plausible examples of what the current Argentinian government could do, within the law and the constitution, given a compliant judiciary.