With pleasure. Here is a couple simple examples:
“Stop doing *that or we will hurt you.”
Stop waving that gun around threatening people, driving drunk, beating that person… I have no problem with that. Maybe you need to be a little more specific about what “that” is?
“Give us your money or we will hurt you.”
Taxation. The state has the right to tax people–from the CCC: 2240 Submission to authority and co-responsibility for the common good make it morally obligatory to pay taxes, to exercise the right to vote, and to defend one’s country:
Pay to all of them their dues, taxes to whom taxes are due, revenue to whom revenue is due, respect to whom respect is due, honor to whom honor is due.45 [45 Rom 13:7]
[Christians] reside in their own nations, but as resident aliens. They participate in all things as citizens and endure all things as foreigners. . . . They obey the established laws and their way of life surpasses the laws. . . . So noble is the position to which God has assigned them that they are not allowed to desert it.46
The Apostle exhorts us to offer prayers and thanksgiving for kings and all who exercise authority, "that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life, godly and respectful in every way."47
*** **could be anything the rulers don’t want you do do, whether it is hurting anyone else or not.
******charge you with a crime, take your money, your car, your home, arrest you, tase you, mace you, beat if you don’t come quietly, put you in prison, and–if you resist strongly enough–we can kill you, and get away with it.
I totally agree that the government has moral boundaries as do individuals and other social entities. And to be honest, I think our government (US) is violating some of these
However, there are certain actions which the libertarians perceive as “victimless crimes” or “not harming anyone” which are not victimless or not harmful. The harm to others may be harm to the social order or harm to individuals involved, altho they have supposedly consented. Of these types of crimes, some should definitely be illegal, and those which are not currently illegal should be on a sort of “tolerated” list due to causing more disorder to enforce than the acts themselves cause.
I realize there are other kinds of coercion: mental duress, shaming/shunning or a lack of other reasonable options, but I believe there is a rational basis for distinguishing between physical violence (and the threat of physical violence) and other forms of coercion.
Well, physical violence is certainly easier to be clear about, and the others may be more subjective and this trickier to deal with, bit i don’t think they should be ruled out as immoral.