Maybe in your mind, but not in our legal framework. Some rights I would agree are, or should be considered inalienable. Those would be largely ones, the exercise of which, did not prejudice other's rights. Take this as a thought exercise. The First Amendment states that Congress shall make no law prohibiting the free exercise of religion. Should this be read to prevent the government from banning the ancient religious practice of human sacrifice?
A right that denies life or liberty to someone else isn’t a right at all. You don’t have to go ancient. You can see “honor killings” that have occurred by Muslims in the US as being abhorrent violations of someone else’s life or liberty. That it is done in the name of religion doesn’t deny them their religion.
John Adams said that our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. In other words, it relies on the decency of people to do the right thing. The Constitution restrains government, not the citizens, so the Founders presumed that men of decency would hold public office, but would be constrained by the Constitution when they didn’t.
“One of the foremost constitutional theorists of the founding generation, John Adams, observed, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious People. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”1 He wasn’t the only Founding Father to hold this view. Indeed, James Madison wrote that our Constitution requires “sufficient virtue among men for self-government,” otherwise, “nothing less than the chains of despotism can restrain them from destroying and devouring one another.”2
“Many of our Founders were men of faith or were influenced strongly by the Judeo-Christian tradition.3 They accepted the premise of mankind’s imperfect nature. They had experienced first-hand the oppressive dictates of Parliament and the Crown that led to the American Revolution. And they were rightly suspicious of the accumulation of governmental power by one person or a small body — “the very definition of tyranny” according to Madison.4”
https://constitutionallaw.regent.edu/preserving-a-constitution-designed-for-a-moral-and-religious-people/