If that is the case, then it will be the job of the judicial branch of government to make the determination that a particular law violates the “highest law of the land”, and so overturn it. It is not the job of each citizen to decide for himself which laws are pointless.
On the contrary, it is up to the citizens to tell the legislature and courts which laws are unjust or pointless, and they must often do so through disobedience. Not only does civil grown depend on this, but the clergy sanctions it.
The judiciary can only rule on the cases that come to it. Brown v Board of Education, Ford v. Wainwright, Wisconsin v Yoder, Loving v Virginia – all of these cases (and you may agree or not with how the court rules) had to be brought to the court by interested individuals before the court could rule. Many times this is done by disobeying a bad law. The U.S. justice system is BUILT on arguing with authority, and that’s not just the U.S. system.
I would be wary of any position which, like yours, could so easily be interpreted as telling Thoreau, Gandhi, and Martin Luther King that they don’t have the right to civil disobedience. I would note that MLK was a recipient of the Pacem in Terris Award.
The Church may have used regal language to describe the responsibility back then, but it is clear that the rules applied equally well to any form of legitimate government. Church teaching explains that all power ultimately comes from God. So if the king is exercising that power for the common good of his people, then his laws are to be respected. Why should not the same explanation apply to a president or a prime minister as well? If anything, the elected leaders have even more legitimacy than kings, and should be obeyed even more.
I believe we are WELL past the age when the divine right of kings was an automatic and respected policy. Certainly, that doctrine caused much strife in the early days of Protestantism, and the U.S. Declaration of Independence (“all men are created equal”) is directly opposed to it.
If an elected leader has more legitimacy, then that is surely proof that their authority does NOT come from on high but from their own people. If those people find it necessary to revoke that authority, then it is their civic duty to do so. They should do so legally if at all possible. However, once all legal methods have been utterly exhausted and disobedience becomes the only option, then that option should be taken.
The more I’ve read this discussion, the more convinced I am that any pointless law is an immoral law. Such a law imposes upon its citizenry for no reason other than perhaps a delight in power by lawmakers and enforcers, and that is not to be encouraged. Such a law should be fought, legally and, ultimately and if absolutely necessary, through civil disobedience.
If the law is NOT pointless, then the legislature should make clear to the public how it is useful and good. That is part of the legislature’s job. For there is no other way for the electorate to vote well than by knowing the efficacy of the elected. If elected officials hide their purposes from the citizenry (except perhaps in rare and extreme circumstances) then they are doing a bad job and should be removed from office.