@Seroim I made that last post ina bit of an emotional mood, since laïcité is actually a thing I throughly 100% despise, and I was enraged that somebody would defend it on this site, let alone to prop up an islamophobic policy.
Listen, every society is going to enforce a moral code of some sort. That's why we have bans against public nudity and icnest even though they are theoretically harmless. They represent an abhorrent perversion to our concept of family, and to what we consider decent in public. The argument is not if society can enforce a moral code, because it's impossible for a society not to. It's whether a woman openly epxressing her religion by covering her face should be considered a societal perversion and stamped out. Your arguments seem to be:
1. The majority of Quebecois think niqabs are oppressive, therefore they are oppressive.
1. The niqab runs in heresy to the Quebec state religion of militant apathy and should be stamped out.
I'm sorry, I don't accept either. People should have the right to be open and loud about their religious beliefs. They should have the right to cover their faces, to wear cross necklaces, to wear kippahs, to pray in public. There is harm in people establishing astranglehold on all society with their religious beliefs, as what happened to pre-1960s Quebec, but forcing people to keep quiet about their religious beliefs and even abandon them if they are too non-conforming is a disgusting and obvious front against freedom of religion. Both are societally unhealthy state forays into religion, and ought to be curtailed.
Also, it's also important to note that according to statistics, Quebec is the most Islamophobic province in Canada, topping even notoriousy conservative Alberta. I can't help but wonder how much of this is playing into this utilization of "laïcité", and I also wonder how long it'll be until headveiling period - Which unlike Niqab is almost universally considered mandatory under Islam - Is considered " flaunting the most basic rules of "vivre-ensemble" and banned too, along with Sikh headcoverings. It's not like they're that far away from Niqabs in terms of showing one's religiosity.