By restraint, I mean that I will discuss with someone what I believe, though I will never use violence to promote my position. I don't think the protests that I do fall under the category of passive, since we do go out in public
As long as the protest isn't violent, then it is passive impedence to the traffic, and merely influencing (like watching TV, or reading a book) the wider world. If you go and murder a few soldiers, then that is active impedence and crossing a line that I have called the Mill Limit (despite the fact that John Stuart Mill would have disagreed with it... still its his fault for being inconsistent

The problem with moral relativism is how do you come out with the presupposition that violence is wrong? That's what I'm not getting. If all points of view are equally valid, why should we restrain the violent? That's why I believe pacifism cannot work under moral relativism.
"Violence is wrong" is a position shown by the relativisms, where violence is a means of imposing your will on others (active impedence).
In any society, moral relativism for me means "moral relativism, until you break the law".
Its part of a wider notion that all good ideas have their limits.
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