You're saying the torture clause overrules the law that adultery be punished. Yet the right of liberty does not overrule the law that theft be punished by incarceration.
So you are arbritarly picking out and applying clauses to suit your personal worldview.
Not what I'm saying, but nice try. I haven't said a word about what set of laws would be imposed besides the basic ones. You keep diverting from the subject and picking on things I haven't even spoken about. Since you're having a hard time reading, let me translate my list into something you can understand, and then we can go from there:
1.
People are born deserving of equal dignity.
2.
An individual has the right to be alive, not a slave, and feel safe, unless he breaks known, codified laws whose punishment in his country is also known and codified, and he is punished to that precise extent. No, you still can't torture. Not saying anything about which laws he'd be breaking, so your constant attempt to bring that up is diverting from the subject. There is flexibility here. That's how you can keep your cultural values without slaughtering each other in lynching mobs.
3.
Someone's gender, race, sexuality, religious belief and all of that good stuff will not make them any lesser in the eyes of the law. 4.
Real slavery is forbidden. You're a free man, mubs. You are tired of paying taxes? Fuck off to another country and don't pay taxes. Saudi Arabia won't make you pay a dime. If only freeing yourself from actual slavery was so easy as just walking away!
5.
No unnecessarily cruel punishments, no torture. You know, stoning.
6.
Everyone has the right to be recognized as a person before the law, everyone's equal before the law and entitled to equal protection. Can't make that one much easier for you.
7.
Everyone has the right to an effective remedy by the competent national tribunals for acts violating the fundamental rights granted him by the constitution or by law. Can't make that one easier, either.
8.
No one can be arrested or jailed or kicked out of their country for no reason. 9.
Everyone gets a fair trial, and their criminal activity (as defined by the codified laws made prior to the time of the activity) is rewarded with the prescribed punishment only, no excess, no torture, end of story. Presumed innocent until proven guilty.10.
Anyone--and this is very important, mubs--
has the right to leave their country, and has the right to flee from persecution and seek asylum in other countries. This is one of the most vital parts of the whole. As long as there is freedom of movement, freedom to leave the country (yes, even for women and minorities) to rebuild elsewhere if they do not agree with the codified laws of their region, you can make some defense for keeping laws on the books that are counter to Western ideals.
11.
No one has to be forced to live in the wilderness outside of society. 12.
People get to get married and have families. No, no child brides. Consent always necessary for both partners.
13.
You get to own stuff without someone coming and seizing it for no reason.14.
Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, can't make that easier.
15.
Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association. Ain't nothing simpler than that.
So, now that you have the full list of my claims, I hope you can stop going on tirades about paying taxes and laws against adultery. There is some flexibility in keeping your laws and your cultural values, even if I don't personally like them, as long as there is the protected right of every individual to leave the country, as long as they are treated fairly within the country and their basic rights as stated above protected.
We got here because you heard a story about a bunch of girls being murdered for a crime that someone can't even commit. For a crime that doesn't exist. And your position appears to be that, depending on where you were born, that's tough luck, but human lives are worth less than human superstition.
And
then somehow you wanted sympathy over being "forced" to spare a minor portion of your income for welfare and public services. It's a little tasteless to use emoticons when you're engaging in a conversation like this with another person, but I can't help it, I have the perfect little guy for you.