Forcing people to do things they don't want to do will never work in the long run. People will either leave in mass (brain drain) or rebel in one way or another. If you want people to do something, there are generally two options, the carrot or the stick approach.
You can try to force people to do what you want or you can offer people incentives to do what you want. Brute force can yield results, but you have to spent significant amounts on law enforcement and even then you will likely only get mixed results.
Also using brute force creates an atmosphere of mistrust in society and people become generally resentful towards the authorities, feeling disenfranchised and losing faith in the government. On the other hand, If you create incentives for people to do what you want, it generally yields better results and you don't have to enforce anything, everyone is happy.
You can try to force people to do what you want or you can offer people incentives to do what you want. Brute force can yield results, but you have to spent significant amounts on law enforcement and even then you will likely only get mixed results.
Also using brute force creates an atmosphere of mistrust in society and people become generally resentful towards the authorities, feeling disenfranchised and losing faith in the government. On the other hand, If you create incentives for people to do what you want, it generally yields better results and you don't have to enforce anything, everyone is happy.
, women started to be more liberal after the establishment of Gasht-e Ershad because two fucking decades had passed since the time of Islamic Revolution Committees and how they harassed people in public.
Things change, Salar. I know it's hard for you to understand this concept, but societies change. The Iranian society is nothing like what it used to be 44 years ago. That's why I said that the future leader of Iran should understand the mentality of the newer generations. Even with Gasht-e Ershad, women will become more and more liberal and anti-hijab as time passes by unless they're given the choice to choose on their own. Only then the trend may change in favor of hijab. Shawnee worded it perfectly. People don't need someone to tell them what to do, they need someone to bleed for them and defend their interests.
Turkey is a perfect example of reversing or at least stopping liberalism. Turkish women used to be way more secular and liberal before Abdullah Gul and Erdogan. My family who have been to Turkey countless times since decades ago until now tell me that Turkish people have become relatively more Islamic than they were before. I don't care about the reason, but it clearly wasn't because the Turkish government forced them to wear hijab.
I know you said you were much older than me, but I'm still old enough to remember the time when the police forcefully entered people's homes like savages to destroy and confiscate satellite dishes. Nobody does that anymore. You know why? Because now they have realized that it will never work. The issue of compulsory hijab is the same.