her campaign, "we the women," plastered jeddah with signs, calling for the right to drive. today, dozens of women took their message to the streets. one female protester saying, "i think the community is ready to accept us and welcome us as drivers." last month, one woman's bold move, a youtube manifesto, turned her into the rosa parks of the arab spring. her subsequent arrest, detention, turbo-charged the cause. fueled by facebook, publicized on twitter and, despite the country's strict reading of the koran, mandating a wife's sub serve against to her spouse, the big surprise, support from the husbands. >> we've seen men support their women and say, "i want my woman, my wife to be independent and that's why i want her to drive." >> reporter: the protestors say the kingdom's gender apartheid is not just unjust, but unfair and inefficient. saudi women in this factory in riyadh can drive the supply trucks, but they can't drive home. and for these women, low income mothers, paying a driver up to $400 a month is a burden they can't afford. >> it adds to that social injustice th