Another question on Mathoverflow (here: Complete topological groups in which all subgroups are closed) asks if there exists a complete, nondiscrete topological group $G$ such that all subgroups of $G$ are closed.
Consider a finite group $G'.$ Consider the group $G=G'^\mathbb Z$ with the Tychonoff distance $$d(c,c')=\begin{cases}0,\mbox{ if }c=c'\\ 2^{-\min\{|j|:j\in \mathbb Z, c(j)\neq c'(j)\}}\mbox{ otherwise}\end{cases}.$$
(the topology induced by this (ultra)metric is the prodiscrete topology). $G$ with this topology is a complete, non-discrete topological group. The fact that the underlying set with this topology is complete and non-discrete can be found in the monographs by Tullio Ceccherini-Silberstein and Michel Coornaert, Cellular Automata and Groups, Springer Monographs in Mathematics. Springer, 2010 (MR2683112, Zbl 1218.37004). The fact that it is a topological group is almost trivial if you consider the above distance.
Is it true that every subgroup of this group is closed?