There's no such thing as innate rights. Only the rights that we decide to give each other, define in some sort of governing document and then enforce.
You brought up a specific question about torture, I assume because you see it as an innate right to not be tortured. It's no such thing though, it's a right clearly defined by the 8th Amendment (in the US at least).
You can stomp your foot and declare over and over again as much as you want that there are innate rights, but just look around at the actual evidence in the real world and you will see that there is no such thing. The rights you have are the ones defined and enforced by society.
No joke, genius. By innate what we mean is that we should agree to protect them no matter where the person happened to be born. You sound like a sociopath, unable to grasp this concept that is intuitive for everyone else.
Basically the only right we've agreed to protect for everyone no matter where they were born is the right of a people to not be exterminated by genocide. That's just about the only thing that will compel the international community to act.
Now, maybe there are other things that you think we should agree to, but the fact is we haven't. So I don't know why you say that this concept is "intuitive for everyone else" when everyone else, quite obviously, hasn't agreed to your world view.