That's an excellent question. You've hit the bull's eye in terms of the challenge that is facing President Morsi and his government.
We're talking about a Queen Mary here and it just cannot turn on a dime. The Egyptian state is a huge apparatus. It was used basically as an employment program for decades by previous regimes, going back to the time of Sadat, and even Nasser before him. You have a gigantic state apparatus filled with thousands and thousands of people who collect a pay cheque and then go out and drive taxis to supplement their income.
Has there been change in that area? No, not yet. They haven't succeeded in tackling that kind of problem.
This would be a footnote or a nuance to what I said about political liberties, freedom of expression, and so on. The same police and security forces that were operating in Mubarak's time are still there. President Morsi replaced some of the very top officials, the commanders, ministers, and so on, who were in charge, but the basic guys who are out on the street, the ones who actually stop people and check their papers, are the same, and they haven't been retrained.