I don't see any problems with this thread. Theoretically, if you're going to topple an organization you will make a concerted effort to cut off the head of the snake. This type of distasteful stuff is mentioned in many a CIA manual.
I'd say where this is really going is the concept of "Is insurrection permitted under certain circumstances, which is the real purpose of the 2A?"
The first point is based on the founders experience in the Revolution, what did they expect to be the ultimate guarantee of liberty? The fact that as long as elections were held, liberty was present, therefore, as long as elections are held, no tyranny is present, and there is no right of insurrection. The counter would be that the BoR enshrines the means of insurrection whenever the body of the people, in the form of the militias, demand it. Having just gained independence, by the closest of margins, the founders wanted to ensure that the people had the means to resist any government they found "That whenever any form of government becomes destructive to these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness."
The federal Congress is limited in its uses of the militia, "to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions; ". The states have no such restrictions on their use of the militias. In fact, based on the War of 1812, because 4 states refused to call out their militias to support the war, and the size of the regular Army was too small to fight foreign wars, the National Guard was created to evade these restrictions by being a reserve of the Army, rather than a form of militia organization.
We currently have the problem of how to contain government power when the political system works to thwart the will of a substantial number of the citizens, and the states have no organized militias to enforce their nullification powers.