That's a fair statement, but my point is that the US didn't actually violate any treaty obligations. The US federal government ordered Texas to comply with the World Court, Texas refused, the Supreme Court ruled in Texas' favor. There was nothing else that the US could do to ensure compliance, outside of what it did.
Even though SCOTUS is a branch of the federal government, it's an independent branch in place to, in part, adjudicate disputes between the states and the feds, and in this case, decide where the line is between treaties signed by the federal government and states' rights as they apply to criminal justice at the state level. You can't say SCOTUS violated any treaties, because the US never signed a treaty obliging SCOTUS in advance to rule any certain way - in fact, such a treaty would be invalid anyway, in that it would violate separation of powers.
Even though SCOTUS is a branch of the federal government, it's an independent branch in place to, in part, adjudicate disputes between the states and the feds, and in this case, decide where the line is between treaties signed by the federal government and states' rights as they apply to criminal justice at the state level. You can't say SCOTUS violated any treaties, because the US never signed a treaty obliging SCOTUS in advance to rule any certain way - in fact, such a treaty would be invalid anyway, in that it would violate separation of powers.
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