Stuart wrote:
Thank's for proving my point Elfie. I repeat from earlier posts 'unless the Supreme Coup says otherwise." So, if a treaty contradicts the Constitution it shoudl go to the Supreme Court, if the Supreme Court upholds the treay regardless, then the Constitution has been effectivley ammended. See earlier examples in earlier posts.
While it's true that as a practical matter, the Supreme Court is the final arbiter of questions regarding law -short of one of the other branches of government telling the Court to buzz off (like Andrew Jackson did)- that's not amending the Constitution -it's
flouting the Constitution. A cracker sherriff who looks the other way as a mob lynches a black man hasn't amended the law, he has chosen to ignore it. There's a gargantuan difference.
As to contradictory treaties, we have already dealt with this; the system was deisgned when international treaties were rare, now they're being signed every day. Contradictory treaty requirements is a problem.
Just like any other law, if there's a contradiction, you would go by order of precedence, or the more recent one in cases where the two acts have equal standing.
For example, if the interstate speed limit was set at 55 during Carter's term, and raised in a later act of Congress, you would obviously go by the newer law. If a treaty ratified in 1799 says that the US Navy and Coast Guard will return runaway slaves found in US waters, but the 13th Amendment abolishes slavery and the 15th denies compensation rights to slave owners for lost or confiscated "property", then that part of the 1799 treaty is null and void. If a treaty was ratified in 1868 demanding the seizure of slave ships and freeing the slaves on board, then the new treaty trumps the old one. It's actually very simple.
How other countries handle these matters I'll leave for others to discuss because I don't know enough about law or government for other countries to give an educated opinion.
Then we have the problem of defining "torture".........
It's no more difficult to define torture than it is to define rape or child molestation. The Convention on Torture, like the GC, uses fairly plain language so one doesn't need a degree in law or Latin to understand it.
Stuart wrote:
Now define "severe".
For example, is having a buxom blonde in a minimal state of dress sitting in your lap "severe"?
If she's smothering you, yes. If she's trying to arouse a boner out of you so the guards can pull off your pants and photograph you with a hard-on in a room full of naked men, then threatening to post copies all over neighborhoods where homosexuals are killed for sport; yes.