If Hashem wanted to be mattir, I'm sure Hashem could have written the Torah in that way.
this is not a "hashem writing" issue, but a rabbinic application/recent historical approach/stare decisis issue. If the torah said don't uproot a get, you got me. otherwise, anything is fair play (shofet asher beyamecha, and per Elchonon's excellent hypothetical re rov jews changing their mind on the binding nature of shas, there is no inherent absolute block on changing a rabbinic decision, just gotta get the right consensus of opinion).
I know this is clearly not the place where i will find many people receptive to what sound like the more reformist/open orthodox viewpoints here like valuing extreme human suffering/significant embarassment of God and his Torah (which seem to any laymen/non-jew as clearly weak, stuck in the past and helplessly mysogynistic in causing such grief and unfairness to women, when truth be told, there is plenty that could be done in theory. While many have overpushed the point, the precedent of Hillel and the purzbal is pretty clear along with many others in much more extreme contradictions with actual "Hashem-writing" law in the torah (god says let borrowers be free, Hillel says pretend the Beis din is the creditor, without any real true mechanism other than sleight of hand (but for a holy purpose and do to an extreme need, eis la'asos...). my point is simply that in everything we do we must weigh our choices very carefully (see the start, and the rest, of R Chaim Shmulevitz on Aveirah lishma), and while its clear that in general Hashem HATES Ervah, in this case calling it ervah is a real stretch, and considering how much Hashem exhorts us to care for those who suffer and generally are underprivileged, as well as our need to be a true light to the nations, reconsidering whether to apply legal halachic mechanisms considering the change in circumstance including world opinion is not crazy.
and since we are in the parsha (re Yehuda and Tamar), please note how many angles of ervah (as noted by Chazal) were involved with the house of David and mashiach.
You are clearly equalizing halacha, toras hashem, to the secular legal system.
This is so very wrong that I don't even know where to start!
if u can't even answer an obvious apikorus like me (1/2 joke), not sure you are entitled to throw your opinions around
i'm not equalizing anything. so much of shas and on is about balancing competing halachos (pls check out R Shmulevitz's excellent vort on why we dont teach all of shulchan aruch to a convert). Being a jew is not easy, its really hard. its why we are the priests, and who people should look to. if we are quick and easily decisive about our halachic decisions or pronouncements about other's decisions, we should be worried. NOTHING is clear cut, and we must be charedim, trying to (and praying to) pass all the tests we encounter every day.