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The Arab Spring is the outcome of a number of repressive policies against Arab citizens from their own governments. This anger was fomenting in the Arab populaces (at different rates in different countries) pretty much since the Independence Movements secured the European Colonizers' retreat. The reason the Arab Spring did not happen earlier is that most Arabs did not believe that they had the power to overthrow their governments. The ouster of Zine Abidine ben Ali in Tunisia changed that view and encouraged Arabs in different states to revolt against their leadership.

Arab Spring Protesters had a variety of demands which a number of the Arab Leaders were not willing to concede. Some of these included, but were not limited to the following:

1) Democracy: Arabs want a hand in how their own governments create policy as opposed to the dictatorships in the Arab World that masquerade as republics when there are no elections. In Egypt in particular, Mubarak was seen as being completely out of touch with what Egyptians want and need and being incredibly repressive and ineffective while doing so.

2) Economic Self-Sufficiency: Many Arabs see the current government s as having inadequately built up their economies both in terms of the governments' failure to create jobs and build internal infrastructure as well the governments' failure to make sure that grains like rice and corn remain affordable to the "average Dick and Jane Arab". This is a huge problem in Egypt where a large percentage of the population is unemployed, underemployed, or needed to leave the country in order to find work.

3) So-Called First Amendment Rights: Many Arabs in Egypt especially from unrepresented minorities (like Christians, Bahai'i, and Jews) want the ability to openly pray to their Gods in their proper context and to do so on equal footing with the predominant religion (Sunni Islam). Arabs also want to have the freedom to criticize their leaders and to protest freely against them if need be.

4) Citizenship over Race/Religion: A major trend in the Arab World has gone unrecognized by the authorities prior to the Arab Spring. Most people in Arab countries belong to a certain ethnic, religious, and tribal group that the state identifies and discriminates between. Many protesters in the Arab Spring would prefer official recognition that all people who live within the borders of a country are citizens regardless of race or religion and should have equal rights and privileges. In Egypt, there is historical precedent for this with the Pharaonic Movement in the 1920s, prior to the rise of Arab Socialism (which alienated Non-Arab Egyptians) and the rise of Islamism as an undercurrent (which alienates Non-Muslim Egyptians).

5) Transparency: Arab Regimes like Egypt are notoriously corrupt. Nepotism, racism, and many other non-meritocratic means are used to promote people into positions of power and wealth. Arab Spring Protesters want a government that is accountable to its people and that functions based on meritocracy.

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