The slogans and chants of demonstrators in Beirut and other cities from the north to the south hit all political leaders without exception, in an unusual scene in Lebanon breaking "taboos" that were not easy to overcome.

Their content varied from restoring the chants of the "Arab Spring" demanding the overthrow of the regime to putting the pillars of government in the same rank, without distinction and launching slogans that spread like wildfire despite the obscurity of its vocabulary, in an indication of the extent of popular anger.

In Beirut's squares, as in the city of Tripoli, the stronghold of the Future Movement led by Prime Minister Saad Hariri in the north, the cities of Tire and Nabatieh, the Shiite strongholds of Hezbollah and the Amal movement in the south, and in the Christian-dominated Keserwan area north of Beirut, the same chanting is repeated on the tongues of everyone, young and old. Revolution "and" the people want to overthrow the regime. "

One of the leading slogans is "all of them all," referring to the demand for the departure of the entire political class, not just the government, which called on its president to step down, saying "Yalla yalla .. Hariri briefed overland."

Out of their vengeance and accusations of those who succeeded to rule the looting of the state's capabilities, throats in Beirut, meters from the seat of government, shout "Capital revolution, tax revolution, racism revolution, system revolution", "Hei Hei Hei government is haram" and " Our state is a shabby state. "

Demonstrators devised slogans for each political leader, the majority of which contain obscene words.

Hezbollah's Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, who had previously been taboo for criticism or negative criticism, was even outcryed, and his mocking of comic strips sometimes caused angry reactions from his supporters on the street.

"All of them are all, Nasrallah is one of them," the demonstrators repeatedly said, in a move the latter commented in Saturday's speech: "Cursing me, I have no problem, but don't cursing the rest of the people."

Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, son-in-law of the Lebanese President and Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun, received the largest share of chants and insults in various regions, and some even turned them into music tracks that were circulated on social media.

Bassil's opponents hold him uniquely determined by the decision within the cabinet, benefiting from a balanced ministerial quota for his current and his alliance with Hezbollah.

In response to the label "B (father) all", which was launched by supporters of the Free Patriotic Movement of Aoun after his election as president, the demonstrators shouted "Fell (leave) Fell with you (not) B all."

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, who heads the Amal movement, did not miss the protesters who accused him of theft and corruption, and carried him to stay in office since the early 1990s.

In response to the supporters of Berri's arms and beatings of demonstrators against the authority in the city of Tire two days ago, the demonstrators in Beirut did not delay in expressing their support for the people of the city, calling "pictures of pictures of Kermalk we want to revolt."

In a mosque slogan aimed at the political class, protesters recaptured a slogan they chanted during a waste crisis that swept through the streets of Beirut and other areas in 2015, "Down with the rule of al-A'arar," a term for people with bad behavior.

Some of the banners raised by the demonstrators or written on the walls were not humorous, such as demanding the law of hashish, or the placement of a sign indicating the seat of the parliament with the words "Council of Haramis" and the writing "Down with the rule of the bank" near a street housing dozens of banks in Beirut.

Public outrage against the authorities has escalated recently after the lira rose on the black market against the dollar for the first time in 22 years, without providing a clear explanation. Protesters see the banking sector, which accounts for the bulk of the country's debt, as a partner in impoverishing the Lebanese.

In a demonstration of Lebanese solidarity in this tiny country of 18 communities, protesters chanted "Islam and Christians with a civil state" in a country where sects are governed by personal status laws and many are demanding the separation of religion from the state.

Near the Druze-dominated city of Aley, protesters cut off the Beirut-Damascus road two days ago with stones and a car with a banner reading "Sorry, the road is cut for the maintenance of the homeland."

On Lebanese and expatriate websites around the world, the Lebanese tweeted with the label “#Lebanon Rising” and “the people wanting to overthrow the regime.” Many expressed pride in a peaceful move without a political agenda that gave them hope after years of frustration with corruption, nepotism and sagging services and infrastructure.

In a photograph taken by an AFP photographer on Sunday in downtown Beirut, two young women carried a banner of English-language paper that read: "The happiest depressed you may ever meet" in reference to the Lebanese people.