The Jews rebelled several times: First Jewish-Roman War or Great Revolt (66-73) the Kitos War (115-117) and the Bar Kokhba revolt (132-135).
Why not?
There were Jews, mostly elite men who endorsed Roman rule. They had already endorsed Greek rule before the arrival of the Romans and had become Hellenised (had adopted Greek customs). This was resented by Jews who were more faithful to their religion and had already caused conflict among the Jews before the Romans. Many Jews resented Roman rule. Taxation was a main grievance. There was the political movement of the Zealots, which during the Great Revolt or First Roman-Jewish War, advocated rebelling against the Romans and expelling them from the Judea by force. The sicarii was a splinter group of the Zealots who also wanted to expel the Romans.
Halakha
Under today's rules we write out the equivalent of 29 into Roman numerals as XXIX But under the Roman rules 29 was XXVIIII *By roman rules I assume you mean Roman Numerals. Romans wrote out 29 as XXIX, the same way they work today.
The Jews revolted
For rules relating to the use of Roman numerals see related links.
moved out of Russian
For Jews, all Jews had to wear armbands on their clothes. Jews could not ride bikes or drive cars. Jews were not allowed in certain stores. Many people called Jews, "Dirty Jews". Jews did not have many rights at all. If they disobeyed the rules, almost all of the time you will have a death penalty if you were at a concentration camp.
just believe in God and do the 7 rules that he gave to Mosses
neutralize
Humans respond to whatever environment they are in. If you are asking why they respond by behaving badly in situations where there are no rules or consequences, it is most likely because they perceive that they are the only persons whose actions and reaction count.
See the attached Related Link.