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* The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_at_Pristina Pristina International Airport incident]] after the Kosovo war would have escalated into WorldWarIII if it wasn't a for ''a defiance of an order''. American NATO commander Wesley Clark, ordered NATO paratroopers to storm into the airport and overpower the Russians. James Blunt, the commanding British officer of the platoon who later became a singer, questioned this order and decided not to carry it out. His decision was backed by his superior, General Mike Jackson, and instead had the paratroopers surround the airport, as Jackson reportedly said to Clark, [[NoJustNo "I'm not going to start the Third World War for you"]].
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* In ''OnePiece'', Jinbe breaks Fishman Island's laws to [[spoiler: [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming give blood to Luffy]].]]

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* In ''OnePiece'', recent ''OnePiece'' chapters, Jinbe breaks Fishman Island's laws to [[spoiler: [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming give blood to Luffy]].]]
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* In ''OnePiece'', Jinbe breaks Fishman Island's laws to [[spoiler: [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming give blood to Luffy]].]]
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'''[[TheSpock Data]]:''' Captain, I believe I speak for everyone here, sir, when I say... [[SophisticatedAsHell "to]] ''[[SophisticatedAsHell hell]]'' [[SophisticatedAsHell with our orders"]].

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'''[[TheSpock Data]]:''' Captain, I believe I speak for everyone here, sir, when I say... [[SophisticatedAsHell "to]] ''[[SophisticatedAsHell "[[SophisticatedAsHell to]] ''[[PrecisionFStrike hell]]'' [[SophisticatedAsHell with our orders"]].orders]]."
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Having even two quotations is pushing it, but there is definitely no need for three.


->''Rules are not necessarily sacred, principles are.''
->--'''FranklinRoosevelt'''

->'''Huck:''' It was a close place. I took [the letter giving Jim away] up, and held it in my hand. I was a trembling, because I'd got to decide, forever, betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself: "All right, then, I'll go to hell!"—and tore it up.
->--''TheAdventuresOfHuckleberryFinn''
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Trope renaming and/or misuse cleanup. If you feel this has been removed incorrectly, please make sure you use check the definition of The End Or Is It and make it very clear in your example description exactly how this qualifies for this trope.


* In an odd villainous (OrIsIt?) example, Saint Dane of ThePendragonAdventure [[spoiler:started out as a good guy, who lived as a spirit in Solara and after a while couldn't stand seeing people make bad decisions over and over. His job was to just show every aspect of a situation, but instead he began to point people in a specific direction, which was technically breaking the rules. (Compare with the story of Lucifer in TheBible to get a better understanding)]] Then he went mad with power and decided to become a god who controlled everything and everyone. Even though the original intent fit this trope (That of pointing man in a positive direction with his hand), at the end of the series he's just gotten plain selfish.

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* In an odd villainous (OrIsIt?) example, Saint Dane of ThePendragonAdventure [[spoiler:started out as a good guy, who lived as a spirit in Solara and after a while couldn't stand seeing people make bad decisions over and over. His job was to just show every aspect of a situation, but instead he began to point people in a specific direction, which was technically breaking the rules. (Compare with the story of Lucifer in TheBible to get a better understanding)]] Then he went mad with power and decided to become a god who controlled everything and everyone. Even though the original intent fit this trope (That of pointing man in a positive direction with his hand), at the end of the series he's just gotten plain selfish.

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-->-''StarTrekFirstContact''

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-->-''StarTrekFirstContact''
->--''StarTrekFirstContact''


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->'''Huck:''' It was a close place. I took [the letter giving Jim away] up, and held it in my hand. I was a trembling, because I'd got to decide, forever, betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself: "All right, then, I'll go to hell!"—and tore it up.
->--''TheAdventuresOfHuckleberryFinn''

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* Sartana in ''{{Machete}}'' could have supplied the header quote if there wasn't already one:
-->"Well, there's the law and there's what's right. I'm gonna do what's right."
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* In one episode of ''PopeyeAndSon'', {{Popeye}} and his son are in a father/son contest, and one of the rules forbids the use of spinach. They end up breaking this rule when they have to save Wimpy and his nephew.
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* Australian independant Senator Nick Xenophon is frequently associated with this attitude, making him [[LoveItOrHateIt a rather divisive figure]]. The main point of contention is his unorthodox use of parliamentary privilege (a shield against defamation suits) for the purpose of whistleblowing.
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* Cassidy Cain in GrandmasterOfTheft mixes this with PayEvilUntoEvil as the titular ClassyCatBurglar.

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* Cassidy Cain in GrandmasterOfTheft mixes this with PayEvilUntoEvil as the titular ClassyCatBurglar.
ClassyCatBurglar, choosing to targets all those who the laws have failed to deal with.
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[[folder: WebOriginal]]
* Cassidy Cain in GrandmasterOfTheft mixes this with PayEvilUntoEvil as the titular ClassyCatBurglar.
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** This is at least partly because for SherlockHolmes, it's more about the thrill of solving a complex mystery than serving the cause of justice; he's more interested in the mystery than the result. And, as he once lampshaded when letting a perpetrator he was convinced was not beyond redemption, it's not his job to compensate for the deficiencies of the police.

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** This is at least partly because for SherlockHolmes, it's more about the thrill of solving a complex mystery than serving the cause of justice; he's more interested in the mystery than the result. And, as he once lampshaded when letting a perpetrator go because he was convinced the perp was not beyond redemption, it's not his job to compensate for the deficiencies of the police.
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* The US Navy's submarine service has a phrase for this, "Bust me on the surface," invoked in seriousness when a crew member believes that a superior's orders directly endanger the boat. Rarely invoked, and the subordinate had better Goddamn well be right. Invoked more sarcastically (and more frequently) when a crew member ignores written procedure in favor of a more familiar but unwritten procedure.

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* The US Navy's submarine service has a phrase for this, "Bust me on the surface," invoked in seriousness when a crew member believes that a superior's orders directly endanger the boat. Rarely invoked, and the subordinate had better Goddamn well be right. Invoked more sarcastically (and more frequently) when a crew member ignores written procedure in favor of a more familiar but unwritten procedure.
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** All that said, it's better to obey at least the speed limits unless utterly impossible: firefighters, for instance, can and have been charged for speeding when trying to get to the station to answer a call, or responding directly to a fire.
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** I wouldn't exactly say "legally". More like "because we need you", as the Ark Dai-Gurren didn't have any defensive capabilities at all.
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** The Paragon end to MassEffect2 is this when you [[spoiler: opt to destroy the Collector base, even though it could be beneficial in the future, stating "We'll fight and win without it, I won't let fear compromise who I am.]]
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*** Not just her, but most of the other teachers as well, including Snape
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** Subverted as of new season six, where [[spoiler: it's demonstrated that fixed points of time and space [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome are not always precisely as they appear]].]]

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** Delenn breaking the grey council with a [[GodSaveUsFromTheQueen royal]] display of [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Awesomeness]].

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** Delenn breaking the grey council Grey Council with a [[GodSaveUsFromTheQueen royal]] display of [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Awesomeness]].Awesomeness]].
** As was Sheridan's speech (in the same episode) declaring the station's secession from the Earth Alliance because of Earth's recent atrocities. He basically lays the cards on the table and tells anyone who doesn't want to go along would be free to leave but that Babylon 5 was not playing by Earth's rules anymore.
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* In the first season of ''MagicalGirlLyricalNanoha'', Nanoha defies orders to save Fate.
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* The final episode of ''{{Titus}}'' sees Amy confronted by the man who sexually assaulted her when she was younger. After finding out who he is, Titus and company have the molester cornered in a school bathroom, ready to wail on him with a baseball bat. The school principal, who up until this point has been nothing but an ObstructiveBureaucrat, says he has to call school security, but tells Titus to "[[CrowningMomentOfAwesome call me when I'm done]]."
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*** That's actually international law, considering crimes against humanity. If some officer orders underling to commit genocide, shoot civilians, destroy civilian infrastructure etc it is underlings legal right and obligation to refuse such illegal order, else they can and will be judged for those crimes, "I was just following orders" be damned.

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*** That's actually international law, considering crimes against humanity. If some an officer orders an underling to commit genocide, shoot civilians, destroy civilian infrastructure etc infrastructure, etc, it is underlings the underling' s legal right and obligation to refuse such said illegal order. If they follow the order, else they can and will be judged for those crimes, "I was just following orders" be damned.
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* In ''SoulEater'', during a mission to retrieve and AncientArtifact from a magnetic vortex, Professor Stein (who was in charge of the mission) and his [[LivingWeapon weapon partner]] Anya were supossed to be the only ones who will enter the vortex since it was to dangerous, while the students of the [[ExtranormalInstitute DWMA]] will stay outside in order to stop enemy interference. However, the students later disregarded the orders to save the teachers(the first group to enter) and his fellow schoolmates (after the teachers came out but not the first group) the latter group being threatened of getting expelled if they don't follow the orders.



* Salvor Hardin in ''Foundation'' has it down to a philosophy of life: "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right." (Hardin himself saved the Foundation, and thus the Future of Humanity, by seizing power in a coup. Granted, he was the senior elected official and the regime he overthrew was undemocratic and completely out of touch, but it's still a good example of ScrewTheRules.)

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* Salvor Hardin in ''Foundation'' has it down to a philosophy of life: life, expressed in one of the epigrams atributed to him which will be later adopted by the merchants:
-->-
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right." (Hardin himself saved the Foundation, and thus the Future of Humanity, by seizing power in a coup. Granted, he was the senior elected official and the regime he overthrew was undemocratic and completely out of touch, but it's still a good example of ScrewTheRules.)"
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*** That's debatable. The Suffragette Movement was headed by white women who were also working toward black people's rights. It wasn't until the Fourteenth Amendment was put on the table, which would give only black men the right to vote, that some of the women demanding rights felt slighted. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, in particular, got upset enough to start using racist language at that point. (Though, for the time period, it wouldn't have been considered quite as racist as by today's standards.) So it was less that the Suffragette Movement was full of racists and more that the women and blacks were working together before the women felt betrayed and left behind.
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* In {{Fallout}}, the Brotherhood of steel are rather strict about who they let join, and who they let keep technology more advanced than a flashlight. However, in Fallout3, we have Elder Lyons, who, when he and his chapter arrived in the Capitol Wasteland, looked around at how bad things are and basically said "Screw the Codex!" Now the DC Chapter of the Brotherhood goes around as something like a post-apocalyptic [[TheOrder Chivalric Knighthood]], dedicating to helping the downtrodden of the area, and working with them to make things better.
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Can be the cause of AwakeningTheSleepingGiant if a group's new leaders decide to break with tradition. If the rules are such that the character is already on the run from the law, see DudleyDoRightStopsToHelp. This trope is the primary drive behind ChaoticGood characters.

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Can be the cause of AwakeningTheSleepingGiant if a group's new leaders decide to break with tradition. If the rules are such that the character is already on the run from the law, see DudleyDoRightStopsToHelp. If it involves directly disobeying a direct order of a superior officer in the armed forces, it's TheMutiny. This trope is the primary drive behind ChaoticGood characters.
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**Kidnapping the President has absolutely nothing to do with "saving the country." Gates just wants to find El Dorado and clear Thomas Gates' name of treason. The United States is under no threat.

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[[redirect:{{ptitleeym5vv2h}}]]

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[[redirect:{{ptitleeym5vv2h}}]] ->'''Picard:''' What I am about to do is a direct violation of our orders. If anyone objects, please do so now. It will be noted in my log.\\
'''[[TheSpock Data]]:''' Captain, I believe I speak for everyone here, sir, when I say... [[SophisticatedAsHell "to]] ''[[SophisticatedAsHell hell]]'' [[SophisticatedAsHell with our orders"]].
-->-''StarTrekFirstContact''

->''Rules are not necessarily sacred, principles are.''
->--'''FranklinRoosevelt'''

So the BigDamnHeroes are about to set off to SaveTheWorld. Not so fast, [[LawfulStupid red tape and bureaucracy]] are standing in the way of the world's last hope. Well, there's only one thing to do. Ignore the orders of the ObstructiveBureaucrat and/or CorruptBureaucrat then go SaveTheWorld anyway. This is, after all, a MatterOfLifeAndDeath.

Other less dramatic examples are usually helping someone out when the rules say that you shouldn't.

However, when a LawfulGood character has [[ToBeLawfulOrGood to choose between order and what's right]] they may break Lawful rather than Good and end up on this path. Some particularly scrupulous types will even willingly accept punishment afterward; this is called "civil disobedience". More often, though, they're SavedByTheAwesome.

Applying this trope does ''not'' mean that the [[IDidWhatIHadToDo ends justify the means]], but rather that the person acts compassionate and follows his conscience even when the rules would forbid it (or to put it another way, they ''do'' justify the means, but the means usually aren't very terrible). When a KnightTemplar attempts this, they are likely to JumpOffTheSlipperySlope [[IDidWhatIHadToDo Doing What They Had To Do]] instead.

A good aligned CowboyCop[=/=]MilitaryMaverick will almost certainly invoke this trope at least once.

Can be the cause of AwakeningTheSleepingGiant if a group's new leaders decide to break with tradition. If the rules are such that the character is already on the run from the law, see DudleyDoRightStopsToHelp. This trope is the primary drive behind ChaoticGood characters.

Compare SuddenPrincipledStand.
----
!!Examples

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* ''{{Bleach}}'' in the Soul Society Arc: Ichigo fights to save Rukia from execution, despite said execution being under law.
** Although the ''law'' in this case [[spoiler:has been subverted by the Big Bad, they have no way of knowing that until the end.]]
*** The BigBad ''himself'' pointed out that the court had violated due process in ordering Rukia's execution, which arguably made the execution illegal.
** Ichigo does the same thing for Orihime when Yamamoto specifically orders him to stay and defend Karakura, thus setting off the Hueco Mundo arc. Though it's worth mentioning that Ichigo was never part of the Gotei 13 and Yamamoto has no real direct authority over him... but he does over some of the people that follow him into it.
** Rukia gives Ichigo her powers despite knowing that it's against the law to do so, setting off the entire story.
** Ukitake and Kyoraku destroy the device meant for Rukia's execution, and do so knowing that their commander - and mentor - Yamamoto would kill them for the treasonous act. [[spoiler: Aizen]]'s far greater treachery stops the ensuing fight between teacher and students.
* In ''DeathNote'', Light Yagami uses his [[ArtifactOfDoom supernatural notebook]] to kill hundreds of criminals in a few days, with the eventual goal of killing every irredeemable criminal in the world. Whether he is right in doing this is up for debate, but ''he'' certainly believes it's right. However, when the police try to stop him, he [[VillainProtagonist quickly decides]] that [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans anyone who stands in the way of his goal is better off dead.]]
* ''{{Dai-Guard}}'': In the series finale[[spoiler: Shirou Shirota disobeys orders to stop a [[NuclearWeaponsTaboo Over Explosion Bomb]] from being dropped on Tokyo to stop the MonsterOfTheWeek from covering the world. His plan works, but the bomb might not have.]]
* ''{{Vandread}}'': At the end of the Second Stage, Hibiki launches into an epic speech in defiance of the planetary governments to rally the people of Tarak and Mejale into standing up and stopping the Harvest fleet.
* ''CaptainHarlock'' turns to space piracy because of the corruption of Earth's government, but still fights for what he believes in and is willing to defend the Earth if need be.
* ''CodeGeass'' has Suzaku, the pilot of a HumongousMecha, punch the mech's designer in the face when he didn't let him go out and fight. Now whether you consider his actions justice-driven or revenge-driven decides whether this belongs here. Particularly interesting in that Suzaku is usually the inverse of this trope, fighting for TheEmpire even though he knows it's corrupt and wicked.
* ''GurrenLagann'' subverts this. [[spoiler: Rossiu sticks Simon in jail to execute him in order to appease a mob, but despite the [[HotBlooded hot-blooded]] past of the show, Simon sits down and takes it. The viewer expects to see some awesome scene where Simon breaks out, but nothing happens. Later on he is freed "legally".]]
* ''TrinityBlood'': In the episode ''Overcount I. The Belfry of Downfall'' Cardinal Caterina Sforza breaks Vatican protocol in seeking to stop a weapon that could destroy all of Rome. As a result she placed under house arrest and is hinted that that she might have been executed. However, she is cleared when the weapon is used.
* ''{{Vision of Escaflowne}}'': The [[LawfulGood Knight Caeli]] Allen Schezar abandons his country of Asturia in order to stop the Zaibach Empire's attack on Duchy of Freid as well as plunging all of Gaea into war. It turns out, [[spoiler:Zaibach's goal to recreate the power of Atlantis would have destroyed all of Gaea.]]
* Negi in ''MahouSenseiNegima'', when the teachers get in the way. He tries following the rules, hell, he's even working to make sure there are still rules to follow. Eventually he just decides to hell with it, they're not going to listen. Oddly enough, however, he's not actually sure that he ''is'' doing the right thing, just that the teachers are wrong.
* This is the motto of the ''FairyTail'' mages.
-->'''Markarov:''' Do what you think is right, that's the way of the Fairy Tail mages!!
* Naruto Uzumaki in ''{{Naruto}}'', this is just the way he is throughout the series.
** Also Hatake Kakashi and his father Sakumo, who became an outcast after choosing his comrades' lives over his mission and committed suicide afterwards. Kakashi himself took on this approach to the rules after his best friend's death.
-->'''Kakashi''': Those who break laws are scum. And those who abandon their friends to follow the law... ''they're lower than scum!''
* In ''{{Anime/Monster}}'', Tenma's boss reassigns him from operating on a young boy with a bullet in his head to operating on the mayor instead. Knowing that he is the only one who can pull off the first surgery successfully, he proceeds with it against direct orders. Morally laudable, but it turned out to be TheWrongRightThing.
* Prince Wilfred of PrivatePrince invokes this ''many'' times, specially when [[spoiler: he plans to renounce to his royalty status and marry into his girlfriend Miyako's Japanese family, if that's the only way for him to stay with her and escape the Royal Family.]]
* Pulled by [[spoiler: Renzaburo]] in ''WickedCity'', who goes [[spoiler: rescue his partner Makie]] despite his boss's orders.
* Happened several times in ''RosarioToVampire'' most notably when [[spoiler: Mizore's mother helps the heroes rescue Mizore from her ArrangedMarriage despite said marriage being legal and traditional, explaining that she knew Mizore would be unhappy because her arranged groom was an asshole.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comics]]
* In Devil's Due's ''GIJoe vs the {{Transformers|Generation1}}'', the Joes defy orders to capture Wheeljack and Bumblebee, who were already working with them, and take them to Area 51 for study when they find out that the nukes the government plans to hit the Cobra base with are going to have an [[EarthShatteringKaboom adverse effect]] when combined with the Energon that Cobra is trying to produce.
** Heck, under LarryHama's pen, the Joes regularly went against orders from more corrupt organizations like the Jugglers in order to do the right thing instead. One story arc even featured ''[[{{Deuteragonist}} Destro]]'' saving the Joes after they were framed by a corrupt General.
* Despite his "Big Blue Boyscout" reputation, {{Superman}} is willing to tear straight through any laws in his way if lives are on the line. He'll also willingly turn himself in afterwards.
* This is {{Batman}}'s thing. The entire point of him dressing up like a giant bat and haunting the night is because he would never get anything done playing by the rules.
* CaptainAmerica:
-->''Doesn't matter what the press says. Doesn't matter what the politicians or the mobs say. Doesn't matter if the whole country decides that something wrong is something right. This nation was founded on one principle above all else: the requirement that we stand up for what we believe, no matter the odds or the consequences. When the mob and the press and the whole world tell you to move, your job is to plant yourself like a tree beside the river of truth, and tell the whole world -- [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome "No, YOU move."]]''
* Most of the anti-registration superheroes in ''[[MarvelCivilWar Civil War]].''
* The dawn of the BronzeAge pretty much happened when [[Comicbook/GreenLantern Hal Jordan]], following a lecture from GreenArrow, disobeyed the Guardians' orders and set out to stop a crooked businessman who was putting poor families out on the streets.
** This is a fairly common theme in [[Comicbook/GreenLantern Green Lantern]], period. The four human lanterns, and often a number of the alien ones will go against a direct order from the Guardians or their Justice League Teammates if they believe it will serve a greater purpose. Kyle Rayner sends a prisoner to Zamaron instead of Oa, John Stewart tells Batman to shove it when Bats disrespects Hal, the aforementioned Hal Jordan example, and Guy Gardner...well, he's freaking Guy Gardner.
** Hell, you could even argue that this is Sinestro's motivation too; he's doing what he feels is right to protect the universe, sacrificing everything that's precious to him - his status as a GL, his family life, his reputation - all because he disagreed with the Guardians over the application of the GL code.
* [[FantasticFour Uatu, the Watcher]] is an observer sworn not to interfere in the affairs of Earth but [[HumansAreSpecial there's just something about humans--]]
* This trope is pretty much the reason that NickFury made SecretWar happen.

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live Action]]
* ''StarTrek III: The Search for Spock''. Kirk and friends steal the ''Enterprise'' and defy Starfleet orders to not return to the Genesis planet in order to rescue Spock.
-->'''Sulu:''' The word, sir?\\
'''Kirk:''' The word is "No". I am therefore going anyway.
* ''StarTrekFirstContact'': Captain Jean-Luc Picard disobeys the orders of Starfleet Command and goes to the front lines to engage the Borg.
-->'''Picard:''' What I am about to do is a direct violation of our orders. If anyone objects, please do so now. It will be noted in my log.\\
'''[[TheSpock Data]]:''' Captain, I believe I speak for everyone here, sir, when I say... [[SophisticatedAsHell "to]] ''[[SophisticatedAsHell hell]]'' [[SophisticatedAsHell with our orders"]].
* In ''StarTrekInsurrection'', the entire plot revolved around this trope so much that their rebelling against the rules is actually part of the title.
* ''Star Trek: The Undiscovered Country''
-->'''Uhura:''' We are ordered back to spacedock... to be decommissioned.\\
'''Spock:''' If I were human, I believe my response would be "go to hell".
* ''DirtyHarry'' lives this trope. So do some other ClintEastwood characters.
* ''TheNakedGun''. Frank Drebin tries to live this trope from time to time, sadly with more realistic consequences than most BigDamnHeroes.
* In ''{{Transformers Revenge of the Fallen}}'', [[spoiler:Lennox and the other NEST soldiers fly off not only to deliver Optimus Prime to Egypt, but actually take the ObstructiveBureaucrat with them so they can push him out of the plane on the way (''with'' the Parachute, unfortunately). The latter was presumably because it would take him longer to rat them out than if they left him at the base. And because Lennox was having way too much fun screwing with the guy.]]
* In the film version of ''TheRunningMan'', Ben Richards is ordered to fire upon a food riot. When he refuses, the crew overpowers him and carries out the order. Richards is then blamed by the state and becomes known as the "Butcher of Bakersfield".
* In ''TheMatrixReloaded'' [[spoiler: Neo realises Trinity will be killed by an Agent, and insists she stays out of the matrix; however, despite his pleading, Trinity states "[She refuses] to sit and watch [Neo] die", and does so anyway.]]
* At the end of ''Film/{{Serenity}}'', [[spoiler: after the Miranda recording has been broadcast, The Operative orders his troops to stand down, on the logic that the damage has already been done and further bloodshed is pointless. He even helps patch up the crew and repair the ''Serenity'' afterwards.]]
** Don't forget Jayne's "If you can't do something smart, do something right."
*** [[BadassPreacher Shepherd Book]] said it, [[AntiHero Jayne]] was just quoting it. Which makes rather more sense.
* ''CrimsonTide'' is all about this. Lt. Commander Hunter (played by DenzelWashington) actually commits mutiny and seizes control of the ''USS Alabama'' in the name of preventing nuclear war.
** Though Hunter insists throughout that it was ''not'' a mutiny, he did everything "by the book". It was the Captain who disobeyed proper procedure, by not holding the launch countdown pending retrieval of the message, and attempting to relieve Hunter for fulfilling his role, the very reason why there's two sets of keys. As far as Hunter sees it, his actions were all Lawful as well as Good.
* In ''Film/IRobot'': Sonny, a advanced robot who is able to think independently of the three laws, agrees that the actions of the main villain are perfectly rational and that their logic is sound in accordance with the laws of robotics; however he chooses go against their plan because it "just seems too heartless."
* In ''[[{{Hellboy}} Hellboy II]]'', Liz Sherman and Abe Sapien go against orders to take a dying Hellboy to Prince Nuada's realm in order to save his life. Johann Kraus intercepts them, seemingly intending to either reason with them or arrest them for disobeying orders, but instead joins them.
* In ''{{Film/Avatar}}'', Trudy Chacon's [[NeutralNoLonger Neutral Face Turn]] comes when she's ordered to fire on a tree full of defenseless Na'vi:
-->"Screw this. I didn't sign up for this shit!"
* ''GIJoeTheRiseofCobra'': General Hawk first subverted his orders by [[spoiler:telling the team that they could violate the spirit of the orders without technically violating the letter]] and later [[spoiler:launched an unsanctioned attack on Cobra's Arctic base after the organization was ordered disbanded.]]
* ''Film/StreetFighter'': "Troopers, I just received new orders. Our superiors say the war is cancelled. We can all go home. Bison is getting paid off for his crimes, and our friends who have died here will have died for nothing. But, we can all go home. Meanwhile, ideals like peace, freedom, and justice, they get packed up. But, we can all go home. Well, I'm not going home. I'm gonna get on my boat, and I'm going up river, and I'm going to kick that son of a bitch Bison's ass so hard that the next Bison wannabe is gonna feel it! Now, who wants to go home... and who wants to go with me?"
* ''{{National Treasure}}'' is all about a guy who ''steals the Declaration of Independence so someone else can't''. In the sequel he kidnaps the President to save the country.
* ''Film/StarshipTroopers'' has a scene where [[DrillSergeantNasty Sergeant Zim]] is arguing with his superior officer to let him join the war. Being a boot camp instructor, he won't get anywhere near the front lines unless he "busts himself back to a Private". Rico bursts in, asking Zim to cancel his resignation so that he too can join the war effort. Zim shows him the resignation documents, and after a silent nod from his superior officer, rips them up and thus gives ''both'' of them what they want.
** And the end of movie shows that Zim did end up busting himself down to private, though that's probably a subversion, since he was actually following the rules in that case.
* The primary reason Jason keeps the evidence from the police in ''MysteryTeam''.
* In '"TearsOfTheSun'', the [=SEAL=] Team engages the Nigerian rebels after watching the rebels massacre a village, not to mention trying to extract as many indigenous refugees from the conflict zone as possible, against direct orders from their command center.
* In ''CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger'', Steve Rogers' first real action in World War II is when he rescues 400 soldiers from HYDRA against Colonel Philips' orders. Subverted to a degree when, after returning the men to their base successfully, Steve voluntarily surrendered himself for disciplinary action, only to have [[AFatherToHisMen Phillips]] say, "I don't think that will be necessary."

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/HarryPotter'' gives a whole speech to this effect prior to the climax of the [[{{HarryPotter/HarryPotterAndThePhilosophersStone}} first book]].
-->"If Snape gets hold of the Stone, Voldemort's coming back! Haven't you heard what it was like when he was trying to take over? There won't be any Hogwarts to get expelled from! He'll flatten it, or [[{{Foreshadowing}} turn it into a school for the Dark Arts]]! Losing points doesn't matter anymore, can't you see? D'you think he'll leave you and your families alone if Gryffindor wins the House Cup?"
** During the whole saga, Harry often breaks the rules to do what's right, to the extreme of [[spoiler:robbing a bank, as well as using Unforgiveable Curses,]] in ''DeathlyHallows''.
*** Although his use of some of the Unforgiveables can be debatable.
*** The first time he tried one (Cruciatus Curse), he was in extreme rage because Bellatrix [[spoiler:killed Sirius]]. The second time (Imperius Curse), he uses it because it's crucial for him to defeat Voldemort. The third time (Cruciatus Curse again) is the only really questionable instance. Of course, what Amycus Carrow did was pretty despicable, but Harry could have just used ''Petrificus Totalus'' instead.
** Sometimes, Hermione (who is always a stickler for the rules) realizes that breaking the rules is the best thing they can do.
** One of Minerva [=McGonagall's=] best moments: during Umbridge's rule as Headmistress, she condones what amounts to almost anarchy at the school from both the students and Peeves the Poltergeist in order to drive Umbridge out of Hogwarts. "It unscrews the other way" will always be one of the best lines EVER in Harry Potter's books.
* ''{{Adventures of Huckleberry Finn}}'': Huck's comrade throughout the book, fugitive slave Jim, has been captured and is to be returned whence he fled. Huck elects to break him out. This instance is a special case within the trope, because Huck in fact believes himself to be choosing wrong, and wickedness, because all the moral teaching he has ever been given has been geared to following rules, and disobedience is equated with evil. His innate moral sense triumphs anyway.
** The fact that he truly believes that he will go to hell for his transgression makes the quote at the top of the page that much more [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Awesome]].
** Since this line has been removed in favor of Star Trek, I will replace it here:
-->'''Huckleberry Finn:''' It was a close place. I took [the letter giving Jim away] up, and held it in my hand. I was a trembling, because I'd got to decide, forever, betwixt two things, and I knowed it. I studied a minute, sort of holding my breath, and then says to myself: "All right, then, I'll ''go'' to hell!"--and tore it up.
* This trope is one of [[TheDresdenFiles Harry Dresden's]] key character traits -- the man started a war over it, in fact.
* SherlockHolmes loves this trope. He even keeps a set of tools to break into people's houses and never hesitates in using them, willingly became an accessory after the fact to the murder of a particularly nasty villain, perhaps knowingly became indirectly responsible for the death of a murderer (expressing no remorse what so ever afterwards), etc. Most impressive is that he seems to not think that the extremes he sometimes goes too solve cases is going too far, shrugging or even smiling with amusement when called out on it.
** This is at least partly because for SherlockHolmes, it's more about the thrill of solving a complex mystery than serving the cause of justice; he's more interested in the mystery than the result. And, as he once lampshaded when letting a perpetrator he was convinced was not beyond redemption, it's not his job to compensate for the deficiencies of the police.
* Similarly, his contemporary ArseneLupin. When he is not lying, cheating and stealing to get what he wants, he is Lying, cheating and stealing to right a wrong or save some one from an unfortunate fate, even when there are multiple, more ethical, ways to do so.
* During the ''XWingSeries'', Rogue Squadron is betrayed by one of their own, who then joins the Imperials in taking over a strategically important planet. The New Republic wants to ignore that planet for now, since attacking would be diplomatically unsound. So Commander Antilles resigns his commission and quits the New Republic, rapidly followed by the rest of Rogue Squadron. They form an [[RogueAgent independent force]] devoted to destroying the bacta cartel. Much later, since things turned out well, the entire squadron is welcomed back, reinstated, and told that they had the tacit support of the New Republic -- the history texts would mark the entire operation as legitimate.
** ''Starfighters of Adumar'' has a similar but vastly more personal version. Wedge and his pilots have been sent on a diplomatic mission to Adumar, whose [[PlanetOfHats hat]] is pilot-worship and BloodSport, in order to get them to join the New Republic. The Imperials have also sent some pilots. Both groups fly against native Adumari pilots and win handily, since as {{Proud Warrior Race Guy}}s the Adumari never get very skilled. The Imperial pilots fly with full-strength lasers and shoot to kill; the New Republic ones do not, and Wedge's diplomatic liaison says that in not following standard native practice they are disrespecting their traditions, which means that the Imperial pilots look better. Wedge tells himself that if it was a matter of flying against some champion, some enemy, he'd do it without a qualm, but the Adumari aren't his enemies. He stalls by pulling a SureWhyNot and telling the liaison that he's waiting for his immediate superior to order him to fly lethally. But he knows that if ordered, he will refuse and end up getting kicked out at the least - which is a big deal for him, since Wedge has been part of the New Republic since he was in his teens, and literally all of his friends are involved in the military.
** There's also Thrawn in ''OutboundFlight'', who ''really'' wants to protect the Chiss, but often clashes with his culture's views on preemptive attacks, which is what eventually leads to his exile. It's morally ambiguous, and Thrawn does [[TheThrawnTrilogy become a full-fledged villain later on]], but it's hard to argue that the [[CompleteMonster Vagaari]] didn't deserve everything they got.
* In ''Discworld/ReaperMan'', when TheGrimReaper, currently in [[DeathTakesAHoliday enforced retirement]] as Bill Door, sees a young child in a burning building, but has his own ObstructiveCodeOfConduct to consider:
-->Death knew that to tinker with the fate of one individual could destroy the whole world. He knew this. The knowledge was built into him.\\
To Bill Door, he realized, it was so much horse elbows.\\
[[AC: Oh, damn]], he said. And walked into the fire.
** This is not the first or last time Death has done this. See also Ysabell in ''Discworld/{{Mort}}'' and the [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zvwYCbBWxT8 Little Match Girl]] in ''Discworld/{{Hogfather}}''.
*** There was a loophole for the match girl; he was acting as the Hogfather, who's allowed to do things like that.
**** It was still [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome awesome]]:
-->'''Death:''' [[AC:The Hogfather can. The Hogfather gives presents. [[CrowningMomentOfHeartwarming There is no better present than a future]].]]
** Sir Samuel Vimes is pretty much this 90% of the time.
* Salvor Hardin in ''Foundation'' has it down to a philosophy of life: "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right." (Hardin himself saved the Foundation, and thus the Future of Humanity, by seizing power in a coup. Granted, he was the senior elected official and the regime he overthrew was undemocratic and completely out of touch, but it's still a good example of ScrewTheRules.)
* At least OnceAnEpisode in DaleBrown's books, Brad Elliott, Patrick [=McLanahan=] and the Dreamland old-timers will ignore or resist the commands of higher authority to save the world, even if most of them wish they could work together with the conventional military rather than fight.
* Siuan Sanche from ''TheWheelOfTime'' does this all the time, although in her case it's more like seeing the rules FromACertainPointOfView.
* {{Animorphs}}' [[SufficientlyAdvancedAlien Ellimist]] can't really "break" his rules without causing a massive, universe-destroying war with the EldritchAbomination GodOfEvil, but he's been shown to twist or bend them in the good guys' favor whenever possible.
* At the end of the fourth {{Temeraire}} book, Laurence [[spoiler: commits treason by stealing the cure for the dragons' illness and taking it to France, because the alternative is to let the illness spread across the world killing dragons who aren't even involved in the war. Then he goes back to England and turns himself in, fully expecting to be hanged.]]
* In an odd villainous (OrIsIt?) example, Saint Dane of ThePendragonAdventure [[spoiler:started out as a good guy, who lived as a spirit in Solara and after a while couldn't stand seeing people make bad decisions over and over. His job was to just show every aspect of a situation, but instead he began to point people in a specific direction, which was technically breaking the rules. (Compare with the story of Lucifer in TheBible to get a better understanding)]] Then he went mad with power and decided to become a god who controlled everything and everyone. Even though the original intent fit this trope (That of pointing man in a positive direction with his hand), at the end of the series he's just gotten plain selfish.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* In ''Series/DoctorWho'', many events in time are malleable and adjust to compensate for visiting time travellers (which is why the Doctor can, say, safely walk around with Shakespeare and introduce Charles Dickens to aliens without damaging the universe). Fixed Points, however, are moments of history that cannot (or at least must not) be changed, at the risk of unleashing horrible monsters that could kill a lot of people, or else seriously changing the timeline. Every now and then a character (occasionally the Doctor himself) will say "Screw it" and try to change these fixed points anyway. The results are never good, even when the character was making a moral stance, or trying to save someone's life.
** In general, a key part of the Doctor's motivation for doing what he does is his righteous outrage at the rules and regulations the Time Lords lived by which prevented them from acting to oppose evil, instead being content merely to stand aloof.
* ''{{Stargate SG-1}}'' uses this trope quite a bit.
** Oma Desala lives this trope.
** In the first season episode "Enigma", Daniel Jackson goes against orders to help the Tollan get to their stargateless new world.
** In the first season finale "Within the Serpent's Grasp" the whole of SG-1 disobeys orders to launch a first strike against Apophis and his assault upon the planet after the ObstructiveBureaucrat and CorruptBureaucrat [[WhatAnIdiot Senator Robert Kinsey]] shuts down Stargate Command.
** In the Ori arc, three ascended ancients are shown to do this to help humanity.
** In fact, the entire series starts with Jack having to explain his use of this trope in Stargate The Movie. Not only did he lie about nuking the Stargate when there turned out to be a threat, which would have wiped out the indigenous civilization (he took the threat itself out with the bomb instead), he lied about Daniel Jackson being dead so Daniel could stay with the wife he'd fallen in love with. General Hammond was not terribly pleased with the two of them when he found out the deception, but he got over it quickly enough.
*** Hell, this is the signature trope of both SG-1 '''and''' their ''StargateAtlantis'' equivalents. They always get away with it. In one episode of SG-1 (''Upgrades''), the titular team disobeys direct orders to neutralize a serious threat. When they return to Stargate Command, Jack explicitly apologizes, mentioning that he hopes the court-martial will be fair. General Hammond then invokes this trope, coming up with a (arguably solid) excuse for why they're not in trouble. ''This is basically what happens all the time''.
* ''StarTrekTheOriginalSeries''
** Episode "Amok Time". Kirk violates Starfleet orders by returning Spock to Vulcan to save his life.
** Episode "Balance of Terror". Kirk violates "inviolable" Starfleet orders not to enter the Romulan Neutral Zone because he feels the invading ship must be destroyed to avert a war.
** Episode "The Menagerie", Spock risks the death penalty to return Captain Pike to Talos IV.
** Pretty much any time the [[AlienNonInterferenceClause Prime Directive]] is mentioned in an episode, Kirk will wind up going against it to save the ship or the planet.
* ''StarTrekTheNextGeneration''
** Episode "Suspicions" does this ''twice'' for Dr. Crusher. The first time, against the wishes of the family, she performs an autopsy on a scientist who she believes died due to foul play. In a subversion, the autopsy turns up nothing suspect and she's relieved of her position. Played straight the second time, when she steals a shuttlecraft and flies into a star to confirm her suspicions.
** "The Wounded" features a KnightTemplar version: Captain Maxwell believes the Cardassians are preparing for war, but Starfleet won't listen, so he goes rogue and starts destroying ostensibly peaceful (and [[CurbStompBattle definitely defenseless]]) Cardassian ships and outposts. Turns out he wasn't completely bonkers, but he was definitely jumping the gun and gets hit hard for it.
** Partial subversion: Another episode finds Data in temporary command of another starship as part of a scratch fleet seeking evidence that the Romulans are violating the Neutral Zone, and goes against Captain Picard's orders in order to achieve the mission objective. When subsequently debriefed he offers his apologies, whereupon Captain Picard points out that a Starfleet captain is not only authorised but ''expected'' to countermand orders if they have reason to believe the safety of their ship demands it, though presumably they would need a ''very'' compelling explanation when they got back to port, which Data had in spades. (Actually TruthInTelevision for many navies.)
** In "The Pegasus", Picard mentions he picked Riker as his first officer because of an incident where Riker didn't allow one of his previous captains to beam down. Picard was impressed by Riker challenging a captain's authority for the safety of the captain and the ship's crew.
* ''StarTrekDeepSpaceNine''
** In "Time's Orphan", security guards stop Miles and Keiko O'Brien from stealing a Runabout in a desperate bid to save their daughter Molly. Odo waves the guards aside, comments that O'Brien should have done a better job of sneaking onto the hanger, and allows them to take the Runabout.
* ''StarTrekVoyager''
** In "Thirty Days", Tom Paris screws the [[AlienNonInterferenceClause Prime Directive]] to try to save an [[SingleBiomePlanet ocean planet]] that was slowly being destroyed by an oxygen mining operation. He gets a demotion and thirty days in the brig for his effort.
* ''Series/{{Firefly}}'' is full of this. The most notable examples are Simon rescuing River, and Mal sheltering them. Then again, Mal's crew are smugglers, among other things, so it's not like they were keen on obeying the law in the first place.
** This is basically Mal's world view. He doesn't care if it's going to get him killed or if it's against the law, he does what he feels is right.
* Pretty much any cop show will have characters deciding this, going against their own bosses, other agencies, ignoring diplomatic rules, etc. so convinced are they that trying to solve a murder justifies doing ''anything'' they want. ''{{Bones}}'' averted it pretty surprisingly when Booth told the team he would ''not'' screw the rules to bust a suspect with diplomatic immunity because of the consequences far beyond their murder investigation.
* It seems like every episode of ''TwentyFour'' involves Jack Bauer violating security protocol/administrative policy/ethical behavior/the Geneva Convention in order to "do what has to be done". He rarely pays for his actions.
** The same cannot be said of almost anyone else on ''TwentyFour'', such as Gen. Brucker, who was arrested and considered a traitor because he defied Presidential orders and [[spoiler: surrendered IRK President Hassan to a terrorist cell, saving thousands of innocent people from a dirty bomb attack.]]
** Jack Bauer ended up spending several years in a Chinese camp being tortured, so... He's probably paid for it.
*** And pretty much anyone he ever cares about dies a violent death or turns out to be a traitor. He also gets fired, arrested, and otherwise punished repeatedly. While he may not always suffer long-term punishments, he surely doesn't gain much.
* Dr. {{House}} so often breaks the rules and protocols that his Dean of Medicine every year prepares thousands of dollars just in case he does something that would require a lawyer's help.
** Slightly subverted after Foreman breaks protocols at a different hospital to save a patient. The patient lives, but Foreman gets fired almost immediately and is blacklisted by pretty much every other hospital apart from Princeton-Plainsboro, to where he's forced to return.
* Frequently employed by ''{{ER}}'s'' Dr. Ross, to the point where it's his downfall.
* Castiel does this in ''{{Supernatural}}''. Angels aren't supposed to defy their superiors, but he ends up hunted and losing his abilities because he decides to help Sam and Dean send Lucifer back to Hell. The other angels want Lucifer to destroy the world because they want Paradise.
* ''BostonLegal'' has one instance that stands out, though it's slightly less this trope and a little more of a threat to invoke the trope: Alan Shore [[spoiler: is defending an old acquaintance accused of murdering her fiancé literally moments before their courthouse wedding. But when it's revealed that the bride switched identities with a close friend years back, and claims that said friend is the real murderer, Alan finds proof that said friend came the bride a year ago and wanted to go back to her real identity. The bride then killed her, and later murdered her fiancé as well.]] Alan's followed up with this: "The only reason you're not sprawled on the floor under a bailiff with handcuffs is because of attorney-client privilege, and, frankly, I don't need this (case) that much. I've done a lot of talking over the years. I'm tired. I'm rich. Take the (plea bargain, 12 years for manslaughter) or I'll walk through that door. I'll get disbarred. And I'll put you away for life. Double first-degree. It'll be life. Until the end of your life."
** Alan Shore does this a lot. When he considers a client to be morally in the right, he has gone so far as to blackmail the opposing party into settlements. He even once pointedly did ''not'' [[CouldSayItBut advise a client to flee the country]] when the case was hopeless, but the cause just.
* on ''ThePractice'', the firm represented a client in a hit-and-run accident. The client's doctor discovered on the plaintiff's medical charts that he had an aneurysm (which his own doctors missed) that would kill him if it wasn't treated. The client refuses to allow the firm to disclose this information. Jimmy Berluti defies attorney-client privilege to tell the boy and his mother of his condition, enabling the doctors to save his life and earning Jimmy a minor judicial censure.
* ''DoogieHowserMD'': Doogie secretly operates on a desperate young boy's injured dog despite hospital regulations. When caught, he fights back, saying that he was only trying to do something kind and humane (“something I see far too little of around here.”).
** Another episode has Doogie giving his 16-year-old girlfriend Wanda a pelvic examination and performing an emergency appendectomy on her his despite the rule that she needed parental consent. Doogie states that because it was a life-threatening situation, “under the same circumstances I’d do it again.”
* Every episode of ''{{Leverage}}'' is about the team breaking hundreds of laws to help someone who's been screwed over by the (usually [[LawfulEvil law-abiding]]) rich and powerful.
* ''BabylonFive'' sees this happen quite a bit, as both Sinclair and Sheridan are liable to violate commands from Earthforce (usually through LoopholeAbuse) to do what they feel is right. The possibly greatest example is from the episode "Believers", when Doctor Franklin disobeys a direct order from Sinclair to save a child from a disease that the child's parents won't let him cure for religious reasons.
** Delenn breaking the grey council with a [[GodSaveUsFromTheQueen royal]] display of [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Awesomeness]].
* In the first season finale of ''{{Series/Nikita}}'', Nikita is captured by the CIA - who believe her to be responsible for [[spoiler: the attempted assassination of the CIA's director]] - and she is only saved when her ally, CIA agent [[ButtMonkey Ryan Fletcher]], [[TookALevelInBadass takes a serious level in badass]] and ''[[spoiler: holds the director of the CIA at gunpoint]]'', despite knowing he'll be sent to prison for it (possibly for life).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Religion]]
* In Jewish Law, there is a concept called "Pikuach Nefesh" which gives explicit permission to violate almost any Jewish Law to save someone's life (excluding murdering an innocent, idol-worship or sexual immorality). Yes, there is a rule telling you to screw the rules.
** Rabbi Hillel told of a man who found a man freezing to death on the Sabbath and lit a fire to save his life, then told off his pious friends when they criticized him for breaking the Sabbath. The intense similarity between this story and the tale of the Good Samaritan told by Hillel's near-contemporary Jesus should not be overlooked.
*** Indeed. A significant part of what is recorded of Jesus' teachings is that it's not possible to follow all the rules all the time and still be doing the right thing, and therefore it's not possible to earn salvation by trying to.
** In one Biblical story, Elijah challenges the priests of Baal to a contest by having each side build an altar and seeing which gets a bigger divine response. (Elijah wins, natch.) The Talmud notes that this technically violated the Jewish law that no sacrifices should be done away from the Temple after its construction, but that Elijah received special divine permission so that God could prove His point. (Since Elijah lived in the Northern Kingdom it was impossible for him to get to the Temple without being killed.)

* Similar to the Jewish rules, Islam also has exceptions in order to save someone, including oneself. For instance, eating pork is perfectly acceptable if no other food is available in an emergency. Human is not actually on the list of food prohibitions, in dire situations (though if you murder someone to eat them because you're starving, you are on the bad list). Various denominations of Christianity also permit this in dire situations (the human thing, not the pork, because pork is not a prohibited food for most Christians).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* This is both Commander Shepard and Garrus in ''MassEffect''.
** In the sequel Garrus has embraced this. It acts to an extent as a subversion. He pisses off every gang on the station, gets his team killed, an in the end realizes he didn't make any kind of appreciable difference.
*** [[RuleOfFun It was fun, though.]]
*** The people of Omega seem to think he made a difference. The Archangel name wasn't his idea.
*** The families of his team also seemed to support Garrus's actions, one in particular telling him not to blame himself for her husband's death because he died doing what was right.
** Whether Shepard's [[NeutralGood Paragon]] or [[ChaoticNeutral Renegade,]] s/he will steal the Normandy after it's locked down by the Council in order to stop the [[EldritchAbomination Reapers]].
** In the sequel, s/he's [[ButThouMust willing-ish]] to [[EnemyMine side with Cerberus,]] a [[FantasticRacism human supremacist]] organization, because they're the only ones willing to help him/her against the Reapers.
* ''{{Army of Two}}''. Overlaps with [[ScrewTheMoneyIHaveRules Screw The Money]], their MissionControl asks them if they want to let the authorities handle it legally, but they decline as they know the BigBad is currently in the process of killing witnesses and destroying evidence inside the HQ.
* BioWare pulled an arguable double subversion in the backstory of KnightsOfTheOldRepublic. The Republic was getting hammered by a Mandalorian invasion and the Jedi were staying out of it because they sensed a threat behind the Mandalorians. While Revan and Malak's intervention likely saved the Republic, it got them DrunkOnTheDarkSide, caused them to try and destroy the Republic in order to "save" it, and turned the Jedi Order into shreds. The double subversion hits when you realize that the Council was right in detecting a threat behind the Mandalorians, even if their approach probably wouldn't have turned out any better than Revan's.
* Another one of their subversions was in JadeEmpire. The Brothers Sun were violating the laws of heaven in their assault on Dirge, committing genocide on the monks, and crossing the MoralEventHorizon in too many ways to count. Still, they thought it was the only way to stop the drought that was killing thousands and left the empire on the verge of collapse.
* ''AceAttorney Investigations'' has this with [[spoiler: the Yatagarasu, two attorneys and a detective who resorted to finding evidence of crime through theft when the law wouldn't reach far enough for them.]] This becomes a mirrored dilemma for Edgeworth late in the game, when [[spoiler: he must decide whether to use Badd's stolen evidence against Alba, since legally it can't be used at all.]]
* ''FinalFantasyX'' has this when [[spoiler: Yuna and company decide to try and defeat Sin without using the Final Aeon.]]
* Ramza's entire story throughout all of FinalFantasyTactics.
** And possibly Marche's story in Final Fantasy Tactics Advance. Though many fans see his motivation as "Screw your Happiness, I'm doing what's right."
*** Or just [[WhatTheHellHero "screw you"]], [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation depending.]]
*** Or just "Screw your [[LotusEaterMachine escapism]] [[EnfantTerrible at the expense of everyone else]]", depending ''depending''.
* A major theme in ''TalesOfVesperia''. The protagonist, Yuri Lowell, believes that if a law prohibits doing what's right, said law should be ignored. His friend Flynn, however, argues that vigilantism cannot bring peace, and that if a law is corrupted then it needs to be changed. The game is rather good at avoiding taking sides in this, with both characters getting their share of trouble when they take their ideologies to the extreme.
* "If you can't do something smart, do something right." may have been said by Jayne, but SpaceQuest games tended to base themselves on the idea. Break into a heavily-fortified, but legally-operating, sweatshop software company and free some programmers from the CorruptCorporateExecutive? Sure, that was game 3. The DesignatedHero of Starcon has ordered that you stick to collecting trash and not look into the suspicious dumping of toxic waste? Screw it, the Eureka is going to look. Ordered in game 6 to ignore the ''highly suspicious death'' of a close friend by a [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections prominent admiral's widow]] who tried to kill you in the process? The quote was "Bite me, Commander."
* The entire last half of ''ModernWarfare 2'' has [[spoiler: Soap and Price going after Shepherd to kill him in revenge for his betrayal, even if the world paints both of them as international terrorists.]]
* ''StarTrekEliteForce''. Munro, ignoring Tuvok's orders to return.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Lord Shojo of ''Webcomic/OrderOfTheStick'' felt the restrictions on the Oaths that prevented them from seeking out the other Gates were too restrictive, especially since two Gates were destroyed within the last 20 years. However, his plans all involved disregarding his Oaths, going behind the backs of his paladins, and contacting foreign mercenaries. While Shojo is portrayed sympathetically, [[WordOfGod Rich]] points out that Shojo never considered trying to convince the paladins that the Oaths were outdated (plus, one of the locations was heavily booby trapped in case Soon or his followers decided to do this, the trapper believing this trope in the hands of paladins would only be a self-righteous justification).
** Miko actually said the phrase "The laws have no meaning... Only honor and the will of the gods matter now". Granted, it turned out that she was doing the wrong, incredibly stupid thing, but she [[KnightTemplar was convinced]] that [[spoiler:killing Lord Shojo]] was the right and necessary thing to do.
* DomainTnemrot has [[http://www.tnemrot.com/?p=74 Angel helping Dae]] after his fight, even though she's not allowed in the ring and is [[http://www.tnemrot.com/?p=74 almost killed for it]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''IronManArmoredAdventures'': In the episode "Fun with Laser", IronMan goes against Nick Fury's order to stop the Living Laser and save the SHIELD space station after Nick's first plan fails spectacularly.
* In {{Disney}}'s ''Disney/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'', Frollo orders Captain Phoebus to burn down a windmill -- with a couple and their two children locked inside of it. When Phoebus objects, saying that he was not trained to murder innocent civilians, Frollo starts the fire himself. Phoebus promptly breaks into the windmill to get the family out safely, and is arrested immediately afterward. Frollo comments on how he expected better from such a decorated officer.
-->'''Phoebus:''' [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome Consider it my highest honor.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]
* Gandhi's brand of civil resistance is built around this trope. It's OK to break the rules as long as you do it non-violently, the rule is unjust, and are willing to accept the consequences.
* His Majesty made you a Major because he expected you to know when NOT to follow orders.
** To clarify: A Prussian Major once made a critical mistake and found himself called on the carpet before none other than a Prince. He argued that he had only been following orders, to which the Prince retorted with the above.
* In the US military, you can get away with breaking the rules to do the right thing provided that you have a legitimate excuse and someone in a position of authority believes you. Similarly, direct orders must be lawful in order to be considered valid.
** In addition, obeying an order you know damned well to be ''unlawful'' makes you a willing accessory to the crimes of the superior who issued said illegal order. [[SchmuckBait Oh, and if they say, "Don't worry, if we get busted, I'll take full responsibility."]] Two words: "Bull" and "Shit." Odds are they'll find a way to get off with a slap on the wrist and you'll be hung out to dry.
*** That's actually international law, considering crimes against humanity. If some officer orders underling to commit genocide, shoot civilians, destroy civilian infrastructure etc it is underlings legal right and obligation to refuse such illegal order, else they can and will be judged for those crimes, "I was just following orders" be damned.
* The US Navy's submarine service has a phrase for this, "Bust me on the surface," invoked in seriousness when a crew member believes that a superior's orders directly endanger the boat. Rarely invoked, and the subordinate had better Goddamn well be right. Invoked more sarcastically (and more frequently) when a crew member ignores written procedure in favor of a more familiar but unwritten procedure.
* The entire Civil Rights Movement was an example of people screwing the rules in favor of what was right.
* So was the Suffragette Movement.
** Yes and no. The Suffragette Movement actually excluded a lot of women, particularly women of color and poor women.
* In general, the principle of ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Necessity necessity]]'': an action that would otherwise be criminal is legally justified if it's the only way to prevent an even worse harm.
** For example, in several states it is legal to cause grievous bodily harm to another person, or even kill them, if they threaten you in your home, car, or in public. This is called, appropriately, the Make My Day law. (If you DO kill the suspect, however, you'll need to prove he meant to kill you, in most cases.)
** It's legal to escape from prison! If you can prove that you did so because you were going to be killed and escape was the only way to avoid it. Also, you have to go right back when your life is no longer in danger.
* Most drivers will tell you that you ''should'' run red lights and exceed the limit if it meant that you wouldn't get rear-ended by the idiot behind you. (At least in America, where you'll never have to worry about retaking a driver's test to prove you ''know the rules'', and where nothing short of a DUI will get your license confiscated.)
** Most drivers will do this, though the DMV-recommended procedure is to ease your foot off the accelerator, giving the tailgater a signal to pass you (if that's legal at that spot) or giving both you and the other driver more reaction time (if it isn't).
** Generally speaking, the US and Canada driving laws break down to the following: you are responsible for what's in front of you. If you get rear-ended, it's not your fault. If you get rear-ended and that results in you smashing into the guy in front of you, then it's your fault (you were too close). If you have to violate a minor law to prevent a major accident, you can (usually) get away with it, as long as the cop believes you.
*** Know your state. Illinois, for example, has no such preference. You can, and will, be ticketed for driving too slowly/unsafely if you cause an accident by breaking rapidly/unexpectedly.
** You are also required to run red lights, make illegal left turns, etc, if such things are ''necessary'' to get out of the way of an ambulance or fire truck.
*** Interestingly, not so in Australia. You cannot out-and-out break a road rule even with an emergency vehicle bearing down on you. Traffic going the other way might stop and you can then go on a non-traffic-light turn, but emergency vehicles prefer that they make the illegal maneuvers around you. Mostly because they are the ones equipped with big flashing lights and loud whooping noises.
** You can also get away with it if you're taking a medical emergency case to a hospital, yourself. The chances are that any police officer who might stop you will escort you for the rest of the way once you explain the situation.
*** Especially after a major fiasco, where a man's wife died of a heart attack because the police officer didn't believe him.
* In Kohlberg's six stages of moral development, this attitude is last and highest of them, referred to as Universal Ethics. A person who has reached this stage will follow laws as long as they allow for justice. To a stage six, an unjust law is an invalid law, and has no hold over their decision making. Kohlberg himself found individuals who had both reached and maintained this stage were very rare, and that generally stage six behaviors would mostly be found in stage five (Social Contract) individuals for a short period of time.
* After the Charge of the Light Brigade, Lord Raglan, who'd given the original unclear order, chewed out Lord Lucan, who commanded the Cavalry Division (including the Light Brigade), for following it when he could see there was something '''wrong''' about the instructions[[hottip:*:Sending cavalry charging directly into a three-sided crossfire, which '''wasn't''' what Raglan had meant them to do]]. Similar to the Prussian major example above, Raglan said, "Lord Lucan, you were a lieutenant-general and should therefore have exercised your discretion, and not approving of the charge, should not have caused it to be made!"
** Which, of course, completely ignored the fact that the LAST few times Lucan had used his discretion (to pursue the enemy when they were fleeing, the whole purpose of cavalry), Raglan had bawled him out at length and threatened to send him home in disgrace. Lucan was also one of TWO generals in the entire expeditionary force who had seen combat since the Napoleonic Wars. It showed.
* On September 26, 1983 [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislav_Petrov Lieutenant Colonel Stanislav Yevgrafovich Petrov]] deviated from standard protocol when he correctly identified a missile attack warning as a false alarm, preventing an erroneous retaliatory strike against the United States and other western targets that could have started World War III.
* Despite assisted suicide being illegal in Britain, the Crown Prosecution Service (roughly equivalent to a US District Attourney but with nationwide jurisdiction) has flatly refused to pursue homicide charges if they're satisfied that the "perpetrator" was acting with the informed consent of the deceased.
* When hormonal birth control was illegal for contraceptive use but could be prescribed for things such as heavy periods (that's just one example) some doctors would prescribe it under one of the acceptable reasons, knowing full well the woman intended to use it as a contraceptive. On a more controversial note, Doctor George Tiller and his father, Doctor Dean Jackson "Jack" Tiller, are considered by many to have invoked this trope by performing abortions on women desperately seeking a safe termination of her pregnancy despite the laws (it was illegal when the elder Tiller did them, and his son was put on trial on several different charges but found not guilty of all charges).
** [[YourMileageMayVary Mileage will vary]], obviously, on the [[FlameBait abortion]] one.
* Everyone who hid or otherwise helped Jews during World War II.
* This seems to be the expressed attitude of [[http://www.resisters.ca/ War Resister Supporters.]] Of course, YMMV on whether or not it's morally justified...
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