That isn't quite what you did though.... What you originally said was this:
Using phrases like "as far as I know" and "I don't know what would stop it" invites others to discuss it with you or give some examples. But the gist of the statement is - we mustn't leave the ECHR and other treaties, because they enshrine our human rights.
You then tried to pretend that you meant Parliament as a whole (commons and lords), but as we explored We only elect MPs and Reform have a chance of forming a government, but little chance of controlling parliament.
In discussions about reforming the HRA, you've held the position that it is no blocker to a government passing new laws and the additional burden is trivial. You now hold the view that the HRA is the cornerstone of our rights. It's actually relatively recent legislation, we had rights before it and we had rights before the ECHR.
such protections are baked in to probably 50%+ of the statute on the books. 100s of offences that include phrases like "it is a defence to", "subsection 2 does no apply if". Not to mention that Human Rights are included in things like the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, The Protection of Freedoms Act, Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act. etc.
You've argued, I confused everybody with waffle, deflection and conflation, when you've presented an over simplified view of the challenges a government would face to make Torture Legal.
I'll concede that you having an interest in a subject shouldn't be treated as a claim of knowledge and that I shouldn't have jumped on it as claim of fact, particularly given you used the term "as far as I know" and "I don't know what would stop it".