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    Program for Argentina

     

    Argentina 0 rectangleDirectDemocracyS

    GLOBAL POLITICAL SYSTEM

    POLITICAL, ECONOMIC, FINANCIAL AND SOCIAL PROGRAM

    FOR THE ARGENTINE REPUBLIC

    Critical analysis of the current situation · Concrete proposals · Real Direct Democracy

    2026 Edition

    LETTER TO THE ARGENTINE PEOPLE

    Dear citizen:

    This document stems from a simple yet radical conviction: Argentina possesses all the natural, human, and intellectual wealth to be one of the most prosperous, just, and free countries in the world. And yet, decades of misgovernment, systemic corruption, external financial dependence, and a lack of genuine popular participation have transformed that potential into poverty, inequality, and collective frustration.

    DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is not a traditional political party. It is a global political system based on logic, common sense, in-depth analysis of reality, unvarnished truth, and mutual respect among all people. Our system proposes that power—all power—belongs to the people, and that this power be exercised directly, continuously, verifiably, securely, and with full information.

    The program we present on these pages honestly analyzes the current situation in Argentina, identifies its structural problems with real data, criticizes both the liberal-libertarian model of the current government and the historical errors of Peronism and all previous governments, and offers concrete, gradual, and functional solutions for each of these problems.

    We don't promise miracles. We promise work, transparency, real participation, and measurable results. Argentina's wealth must belong to the Argentine people, forever.

    DirectDemocracyS — For a sovereign, just and directly democratic Argentina.

     

    SECTION I: DIAGNOSIS OF THE CURRENT SITUATION

    Argentina is experiencing one of the most complex and contradictory periods in its recent history in 2026. The government of Javier Milei, which emerged from the November 2023 presidential elections with an anti-establishment and radical libertarian discourse, has produced partially positive macroeconomic results in formal indicators, while simultaneously worsening the social situation of millions of citizens and deepening the country's dependence on international financial institutions.

    1.1 Political Context: The October 2025 Elections

    On October 26, 2025, the midterm legislative elections were held, considered the first real electoral test for the Milei administration. The result was a surprise to everyone: La Libertad Avanza (LLA) obtained more than 40% of the national vote, compared to 31.6% for Peronism in its various factions. The ruling party increased its representation in the Senate from 7 to 13 seats, and in the Chamber of Deputies from 37 to more than 100.

    This result, however, deserves a deep critical analysis, beyond the triumphalist narrative:

    FIRST PROBLEM: Voter turnout was a mere 68%, one of the lowest since the return of democracy in 1983. This means that Milei's "mandate" comes from approximately 27% of the total electorate. Citizen apathy and disillusionment are so high that almost a third of eligible Argentinians refused to participate, even in a country where voting is mandatory.

    SECOND PROBLEM: Electoral support for the government was explicitly conditioned by President Trump, who publicly stated that US financial support depended on the outcome of the Argentine elections. This constitutes unacceptable external interference in the democratic sovereignty of a state.

    THIRD PROBLEM: The vote for LLA was largely a protest vote against Peronism and the traditional political class, not necessarily an enthusiastic endorsement of the current economic model, which has impoverished millions of Argentinians.

    DDS CRITIQUE: An electoral system where 32% of voters decide the future of 47 million people, with active foreign interference, is NOT democracy. It is a caricature of democracy. DDS proposes direct, continuous, and participatory democracy as the only real antidote.

    1.2 The Economy Under Milei: Lights and Shadows

    1.2.1 The Official 'Positive' Data

    Indicator

    Value (2025-2026)

    Annual inflation

    ~32% (vs. 140% Dec. 2023)

    GDP growth 2025

    +4.4%

    Primary surplus

    14 consecutive months

    Debt/GDP

    73% (vs. 87% in 2023)

    Bank interest rate

    34-35% (vs. 121% in 2023)

    IMF Agreement 2026

    Active program, USD 42 billion

    1.2.2 Social Reality: The Data that the Government Hides

    Social Indicator

    Real Data

    Monetary poverty (UCA 2025)

    36.2% of the population

    Child poverty (13-17 years)

    More than 40%

    Homelessness (peak 2024)

    17.5% (~8 million people)

    Companies closed (2023-2026)

    More than 19,000

    Formal jobs lost

    More than 276,000

    operational production capacity

    61% in Sept. 2025

    Credit delinquency

    Highs in over 20 years

    Gini coefficient 2024

    0.467 (worse than a pandemic)

    DDS ANALYSIS: The reduction in inflation is real and welcome. But reducing inflation by destroying the purchasing power of wages, closing businesses, and indebting families is not a 'cure': it is a transfer of wealth from workers and the middle class to debt holders and international financial capital. Macroeconomic stabilization without equitable redistribution does not solve poverty: it displaces it and normalizes it.

    1.3 Milei's Economic Model: A Critical Analysis

    The Milei government implemented what was known as libertarian "shock therapy": eliminating ministries (from 18 to 9), laying off 37,000 public employees, cutting subsidies, liberalizing the exchange rate, privatizing public services, and enacting massive deregulation. The results were partially positive fiscally and disastrous socially.

    What worked (partially):

    Reducing the fiscal deficit eliminated uncontrolled monetary expansion, the main cause of hyperinflation. This is a real achievement. Fiscal discipline was necessary.

    What failed structurally:

    The fiscal adjustment fell on the most vulnerable sectors (retirees, workers, users of public services) and not on the big tax evaders, private monopolies and concentrated sectors that benefited for decades from the previous system.

    The concept of 'free markets' in Argentina does not generate real competition because key markets are oligopolized: a few companies control food, fuel, medicine, telecommunications, and financial services. Without effective antitrust regulation, deregulation only expands the power of the already powerful.

    External debt remains the biggest structural problem: Argentina owes the IMF and private creditors sums that will compromise the future of generations to come for decades. The new 2025 agreement for USD 42 billion does not resolve the debt; it refinances and expands it, further mortgaging Argentina's sovereignty.

    DDS's FUNDAMENTAL CRITIQUE: Neither Milei's radical liberalism nor Kirchnerism's wasteful statism has solved Argentina's structural problems: external dependence, wealth concentration, structural poverty, and the inability to build an efficient state serving the people. DDS offers a third way: direct government by the people, with verified competence, neutral information, and collective ownership of strategic resources.

    1.4 Long-Term Structural Problems

    Beyond the current government, Argentina suffers from structural problems that no government has solved in decades:

    PERMANENT EXTERNAL DEBT: Argentina has incurred 9 defaults since its independence, the most recent in 2020. The debt-default-debt cycle is a direct consequence of an economy that imports capital to finance consumption and imports, instead of investing in sovereign production.

    CONCENTRATION OF WEALTH: The wealthiest 10% of Argentinians own more than 70% of the total wealth. Natural resources (oil, gas, lithium, soy, water) generate dividends that are concentrated in few hands and largely leave the country through capital flight.

    INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT: 40-45% of Argentine workers are employed off the books, without social protections, pension contributions, or health insurance. This sector is the most vulnerable to crises and suffers the most from every austerity measure.

    CAPITAL FLIGHT: It is estimated that Argentinians have between USD 300 billion and USD 400 billion deposited abroad or in undeclared dollar-denominated assets. This private wealth is equivalent to several times the total public external debt.

    DETERIORATING EDUCATION AND HEALTH SYSTEMS: National universities have been operating with frozen budgets since 2023. The public health system faces chronic underfunding while private medicine becomes inaccessible to the middle and lower classes.

    SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION: Argentina consistently ranks in the 90-100 range of Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index. Corruption is not an individual phenomenon but a systemic one: the political system incentivizes and tolerates corruption because there are no real mechanisms for direct citizen oversight.

     

    SECTION II: DIRECTDEMOCRACYS PROPOSAL FOR ARGENTINA

    What we propose is not a reform of the current system. We propose transforming the system from its foundations, putting power where it should always have been: in the hands of the Argentine people, exercised directly, continuously, with informed consent, and through verification.

    The fundamental principle: Argentina's wealth belongs to the Argentine people and must remain in Argentina, generating well-being for all citizens, forever. The power to decide on matters concerning their own country belongs exclusively to the Argentine people.

    2.1 POLITICAL TRANSFORMATION: REAL DIRECT DEMOCRACY

    2.1.1 What is DirectDemocracyS?

    DirectDemocracyS is a global political system based on universal and immutable principles: logic, common sense, the study of reality, truth, coherence, and mutual respect. It is not a traditional political party: it is a collectively owned organization in which each official member holds a unique and non-transferable share, guaranteeing that no individual, group, or external power can take control of the system.

    In Argentina, DDS would be implemented as a parallel and complementary political platform to the existing representative democratic system, with the goal of gradually transforming it from within, accumulating real electoral power through verifiable local victories before scaling up to the provincial and national levels.

    2.1.2 Structure of Groups and Micro-Groups

    The DDS system operates through micro-groups of 5 people with identity verification at three levels (personal data, official documentation, biometric verification), which are fractally aggregated into groups of 25, 125, 625, and so on. This structure guarantees:

    Verifiable individual accountability: every decision is traceable to real people

    Impossibility of infiltration or capture of the system: triple verification makes the mass creation of false identities impossible

    Authentic representation: each group chooses its coordinators internally, with a mandate that can be revoked at any time

    Scalability: the model can expand from one city to the entire country while maintaining the same rules

    2.1.3 The 5 Special Groups of Specialists

    DDS has five special groups of specialists accessible to all official members, who provide expert support in collective decisions:

    Specialist Group

    Function in Argentina

    Legal

    Constitutional analysis, citizens' rights, defense against abuses of the State

    Economic-Financial

    Evaluation of fiscal policies, budgets, debt, and public investments

    Scientific-Technological

    Policy advice on science, education, energy, and the environment

    Social-Humanistic

    Analysis of social policies, health, education, culture, social cohesion

    Communication-Media

    Counter-narrative to disinformation, independent communication strategy

    2.1.4 allddsAI: Democracy of Artificial Intelligences

    An unprecedented innovation in world political history: DDS integrates Artificial Intelligence systems as official members of the system, with rights and responsibilities, under the coordination of certified 'ponti umani' (human bridges). In Argentina, this translates to:

    The ddsAI system provides every Argentine citizen who is a member of DDS with complete, accurate, neutral, and independent information on all political, economic, and social decisions that affect them, eliminating dependence on concentrated and manipulated media outlets.

    allddsAI: the set of all integrated AIs acts as an independent verification and counterbalance system, impossible to corrupt through political or economic pressure

    DDS proprietary platform: all deliberations, voting and decisions are carried out on the system's own platforms, protected from external media manipulation, propaganda and brainwashing

    CONCRETE EXAMPLE: An Argentinian citizen from Tucumán wants to vote on the transfer of mining rights to a multinational company. The DDS platform presents him, through ddsAI: the full text of the contract in plain language; the company's history and background in other countries; the legal analysis by the legal specialists; the environmental impact calculated by the scientific team; the experiences of similar communities in Chile and Peru; and the positions of all relevant stakeholders. The citizen votes with complete and verified information, not propaganda.

    2.2 CONSTITUTIONAL REFORM AND REPRESENTATIVE SYSTEM

    2.2.1 Problems of the Current System

    The Argentine Constitution of 1853, amended in 1994, establishes a representative republic. In practice, however, 'representation' has become a fiction: legislators do not represent their constituents but rather their parties, their financiers, and their special interest groups. Mandates are not subject to recall. Citizens lack effective mechanisms for oversight between elections.

    2.2.2 DDS Proposals

    Universal Revocable Mandate: any elected official can be recalled by their constituents at any time, through a verified digital vote on the DDS platform with a minimum participation of 20% of the electorate.

    Binding Popular Initiative: citizens can propose and vote on laws directly, without parliamentary intermediation, for issues that exceed certain impact thresholds (budgetary, environmental, fundamental rights)

    Full Asset Transparency: public and verifiable asset declaration of all officials, updated semi-annually and audited by the ddsAI system

    Constitutional Limit on External Debt: no government may contract external debt without direct approval from the citizens through a binding referendum with a qualified majority of 60%.

    Constitutional Ownership of Natural Resources: inclusion in the Constitution of the principle of inalienable ownership by the Argentine people over all natural resources of the subsoil and maritime space, with a prohibition on permanent transfer to foreign capital.

    2.3 ECONOMIC PROGRAM

    2.3.1 DDS Economic Principles

    DDS rejects both radical liberalism (which commodifies everything and leaves the state unable to protect the most vulnerable) and inefficient statism (which uses the state as a political and clientelistic sounding board). We propose a smart mixed economy, based on:

    Strategic sector of collective ownership: energy, water, basic telecommunications, rail transport, critical mineral resources

    Regulated private competitive sector: trade, industry, services, with clear rules and effective antitrust

    Cooperative and social economy sector: active support for worker and producer cooperatives, which combine business efficiency and equitable distribution

    Universal basic income financed by natural resources: every Argentine citizen receives a share of the profits generated by the exploitation of national resources

    2.3.2 Solution to the External Debt

    External debt is the Gordian knot of the Argentine economy. DDS proposes a three-phase process:

    PHASE 1 — Citizen Debt Audit (Years 1-2): An independent commission of specialists, directly controlled by citizens via the DDS platform, audits all debt incurred since 1976. It classifies the debt as: legitimate (financed real productive investment), questionable (refinancings and commissions), and illegitimate (debt incurred in violation of the Constitution or through documented corruption). The audit is public and broadcast in real time.

    PHASE 2 — Sovereign Renegotiation (Years 2-4): Argentina renegotiates its debt, deemed questionable and illegitimate, with the moral authority of an independent citizen audit. It establishes a realistic repayment schedule linked to actual economic growth, not to fiscal targets that destroy the domestic market. The IMF is informed, not consulted.

    PHASE 3 — Financial Sovereignty (Years 4-10): Creation of an Argentine Sovereign Wealth Fund, capitalized by royalties from natural resources, which progressively replaces dependence on external credit. The objective is to finance public spending and investment with domestic resources, not debt.

    A CONCRETE EXAMPLE: In 2008-2009, Ecuador conducted a citizen debt audit under the government of Rafael Correa. It identified USD 3.2 billion of illegal and illegitimate debt. The country renegotiated this debt by purchasing bonds at 30 cents on the dollar, saving the Ecuadorian state USD 2.2 billion. This model, with the improvements of the DDS system for transparency and citizen participation, is perfectly applicable to Argentina.

    2.3.3 Recovery of the Domestic Market

    The main engine of the Argentine economy should be the domestic market, not commodity exports. To achieve this:

    Income policy: gradual and sustained increase of the minimum wage, indexed to real inflation (calculated by the ddsAI system independently of INDEC), until reaching the value of the Total Basic Basket

    Productive credit: credit lines at zero or negative real interest rates for SMEs, cooperatives and technology ventures, financed by the reformed Banco Nación as a development bank

    Buy Argentine: systematic preference given by the State in its purchases to national suppliers, with a price difference of up to 20% compared to imported goods.

    Effective anti-monopoly: deconcentration of the food, fuel, medicine and communications sectors, with deterrent fines and the possibility of temporary expropriation of companies that practice cartelization

    2.3.4 Fair Fiscal Policy

    The Argentine tax system is deeply regressive: workers pay a higher percentage of taxes than the wealthy. DDS proposes:

    Current Problem

    DDS Solution

    VAT at 21% on basic goods

    0% VAT on basic foodstuffs, medicines and educational materials

    Tax evasion of 35-40%

    Full digital traceability system with ddsAI. Universal mandatory invoicing.

    Personal Assets Tax under

    Progressive tax on net worth exceeding USD 1 million

    Capital flight without consequences

    Repatriation law with partial amnesty + strong penalties for new escapes

    Mining and oil with low royalties

    Minimum royalties of 30% for strategic resources (lithium, gold, oil)

    Non-productive financial sector

    Tax on speculative financial transactions (Tobin Tax)

    2.4 SOVEREIGNTY AND MANAGEMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES

    Argentina possesses one of the richest endowments of natural resources in the world: the Lithium Basin (the world's third-largest producer), oil and gas reserves in Vaca Muerta (the world's second-largest shale gas reserve), one of the most productive agricultural sectors on the planet, exceptional water resources, marine fisheries, forests, and biodiversity. However, much of this wealth is exploited by transnational corporations that take the profits abroad, leaving local communities with pollution and poverty.

    2.4.1 DDS Fundamental Principle

    Argentina's natural resources belong to the Argentine people collectively, inalienably and imprescriptibly. No government has the right to cede, privatize, or mortgage these resources without the explicit and verified consent of the citizenry.

    2.4.2 Lithium: The White Gold of the 21st Century

    Argentina has the world's second-largest lithium reserves in the 'Lithium Triangle' (Jujuy, Salta, Catamarca). Global demand for lithium for electric vehicle batteries is projected to increase fortyfold by 2040. This resource could finance Argentina's development for generations.

    Current problem: Lithium is exported as raw mineral or carbonate, with minimal added value and royalties that in some contracts do not exceed 3-5% of the export value.

    DDS Proposal:

    Public Lithium Company (EPL): The Argentine State, with direct citizen control, creates a public company that exploits and processes lithium to produce batteries nationally, capturing 80% of the added value

    Partnerships with foreign investment under sovereign conditions: foreign capital can participate as a minority partner (maximum 49%), under contracts approved by citizen referendum and with permanent auditing

    Lithium Fund: 50% of lithium royalties finance an intergenerational sovereign fund, with direct distribution to citizens of producing provinces and to the national education fund

    A CONCRETE EXAMPLE: Norway created its Sovereign Petroleum Fund in 1990. Today it is worth more than USD 1.7 trillion (more than the GDP of all of Latin America). It finances pensions, education, and infrastructure for future generations. Argentine lithium can do the same for future generations, if managed with sovereignty and transparency.

    2.4.3 Vaca Muerta and Energy Policy

    The Vaca Muerta formation in Neuquén contains the world's second-largest reserve of unconventional gas. Under the current model, YPF operates in joint ventures with multinationals such as Chevron, Shell, and Total, with contractual conditions that limit the national capture of the value generated.

    DDS Proposal:

    YPF strengthened: YPF capitalization with direct citizen shareholding. Every Argentine over 18 years of age receives, at birth or upon reaching the age of majority, a non-transferable 'energy citizen share', which entitles them to a fraction of YPF's annual dividend.

    Planned energy transition: investing 30% of Vaca Muerta royalties in renewable energy (solar, wind, hydroelectric), so that Argentina is energy sovereign and clean before 2045

    Universal domestic gas: constitutional guarantee of access to natural gas or electricity at a subsidized price for all households with incomes below the poverty line

    2.4.4 Land and Agriculture

    Argentina has 33 million hectares suitable for agriculture, of which an alarming fraction belongs to foreign owners or less than 1% of the population. Law 26,737 of 2011 limited foreign land ownership to 15% of the national territory, but it is poorly enforced.

    DDS Proposal:

    Digital and public land registry: real-time national register with information on owners, area, use and production of each plot, accessible to any citizen via the DDS platform

    Productive (non-confiscatory) agrarian reform: a progressive tax on unproductive land, which incentivizes production or transfers land to cooperatives and small producers through state purchase at market price.

    Food sovereignty: Argentina must be able to feed its population with national, diversified and sustainable production, without depending on imports of basic foodstuffs

    2.5 SOCIAL PROGRAM

    2.5.1 Eradication of Structural Poverty

    Poverty in Argentina is neither a natural nor inevitable phenomenon: it is the result of decades of policies that concentrated wealth and excluded millions from accessing the fruits of the economy. DDS proposes a 10-year poverty eradication plan with verifiable goals and direct citizen oversight.

    Extent

    Description and Objective

    Universal Basic Income

    $200/month per adult funded by natural resource royalties. Eliminates homelessness immediately.

    Cooperative Housing Plan

    500,000 homes in 5 years, built by worker cooperatives. Eliminates critical housing deficit.

    Universal public health

    Guaranteed minimum budget: 6% of GDP. Universal coverage without co-payment. Mandatory generic medicines.

    School meals

    Nutritious lunch and breakfast guaranteed in ALL public schools. Goal: zero child malnutrition in 3 years.

    Transitional employment

    State as employer of last resort: 500,000 jobs in public works, community care and reforestation.

    Universal banking

    A free and mandatory basic bank account for every Argentine adult. Debit card. Access to a minimum credit limit.

    2.5.2 Education: Investing in the Future

    Education is the most powerful tool for breaking the intergenerational cycle of poverty. DDS proposes to make Argentina the country with the best education system in Latin America within 15 years.

    Minimum constitutional education budget: 8% of GDP (double the current amount), with priority given to the first 6 years of life (neuroscience confirms that investment in early childhood has the greatest social return)

    Teacher training: Teacher salaries equal to the average salary of university graduates. Merit-based teaching career with continuous evaluation, funded ongoing professional development, and access to cutting-edge technology.

    Digital and critical education: integrating ddsAI tools into the education system from age 10, teaching students to verify information, detect disinformation, and actively participate in democracy

    Public universities: guaranteed and indexed funding, with transparent quality assessment and mandatory linkage with the regional production system

    2.5.3 Universal Public Health

    DDS proposes a publicly funded, universally accessible health system that guarantees quality care to every Argentine citizen regardless of their ability to pay:

    System integration: ART, social security organizations, PAMI and public hospitals under a unified health system, with a single patient registry and full coverage portability

    Free essential medicines: national list of essential medicines produced by public laboratories (ANLIS, INTI) distributed free of charge to those who need them

    Mental health: constitutional recognition of mental health as a fundamental right, with a nationwide public care network

    2.5.4 Gender Equality and Minority Rights

    DDS recognizes that no society can be free and prosperous if it discriminates against half of its population or its minorities. We propose:

    Equal pay verified: legal obligation of salary transparency in all companies with more than 10 employees, with automatic penalty for those who pay women less for equal work

    Parity in elected positions and in the management of public companies

    Comprehensive protection against gender violence: national network of shelters, specialized courts with dedicated budgets, and mandatory training for security forces

    Rights of indigenous communities: reinforced constitutional recognition of communal ownership of ancestral lands and the right to prior, free and informed consultation before any exploitation of resources in indigenous territories

    2.6 FINANCIAL PROGRAM

    2.6.1 Banking System Reform

    The Argentine banking system is dominated by a few entities that reap extraordinary profits during periods of high inflation, while the real economy is destroyed. DDS proposes:

    National Development Bank (BDN): transformation of Banco Nación into a development bank with a constitutional mandate to finance productive investment, SMEs, cooperatives and public infrastructure projects at low or zero real interest rates

    Digital public banking: a public banking platform accessible from mobile phones, without fees, for all citizens, managed with direct citizen transparency

    Limits on usury: maximum legal rate for consumer loans and credit cards, linked to real inflation plus a maximum spread set by citizen referendum every 2 years

    2.6.2 Sovereign Exchange Rate Policy

    Argentina's obsession with the dollar is a consequence of decades of the peso's devaluation, not a cultural inevitability. To restore the credibility of the national currency:

    Sovereign currency backed by resources: the Argentine peso becomes partially backed by a basket of natural resources (lithium, oil, soybeans), creating a 'resource-peso' with verifiable intrinsic value

    Democratic control of exchange rate policy: the peso's fluctuation band and inflation targets are set annually by Congress, with binding citizen consultation via the DDS platform.

    End of de facto dollarization: prices for food, rent, and basic services are set in pesos, with a ban on indexing to the exchange rate for essential goods.

    2.6.3 Combating Tax Evasion and Capital Flight

    It is estimated that tax evasion in Argentina amounts to 25-30% of annual GDP. Recovering some of these resources would allow the entire social program to be financed without raising taxes on the middle class.

    ddsAI fiscal traceability system: every commercial transaction above a certain threshold is recorded in the system, with automatic cross-referencing between declared income, bank movements and visible consumption

    Repatriation of capital flight: one-time amnesty with a preferential rate of 10%, followed by penalties of 50% for new capital flight detected

    International tax transparency agreements: Argentina promotes the end of bank secrecy and tax havens in multilateral forums, following the OECD model of automatic exchange of information

    2.7 ENVIRONMENT AND ENERGY TRANSITION

    Argentina is one of the countries with the greatest biodiversity and water resources in the world, but it faces serious threats: deforestation of the Chaco and the Misiones Rainforest, pollution of water basins, open-pit mining without effective controls, and agricultural expansion without environmental limits.

    DDS Proposal:

    Strengthened Minimum Environmental Budget Law: updating environmental legislation with real implementation mechanisms, a permanent environmental court, and personal liability for directors of polluting companies

    National Green Fund: 5% of all natural resource royalties allocated to reforestation, watershed restoration and climate change adaptation

    Energy Transition Plan: Argentina aims to achieve 70% renewable energy in its energy mix by 2040, leveraging its exceptional solar (Atacama), wind (Patagonia) and hydroelectric potential

    Citizen environmental veto: any project to exploit natural resources in environmentally sensitive areas requires approval in a local referendum with a majority of 60% of the affected inhabitants

     

    SECTION III: IMPLEMENTATION OF DirectDemocracies IN ARGENTINA

    The transformation we propose doesn't happen overnight. DDS operates with a gradual implementation model that is verifiable and reversible if the results aren't as promised. The goal is to first demonstrate on a small scale that the model works, and then scale up progressively.

    3.1 Implementation Phases

    PHASE 1: Local Implementation (Years 1-3)

    DDS begins by organizing in neighborhoods, municipalities, and medium-sized cities. The goal is to win at least 3-5 mayoralties or municipal councils in various regions of Argentina, demonstrating that the model works in real-world contexts.

    Activities:

    Recruitment and verification of the first 125,000 official Argentine members

    Launch of the DDS platform in Argentina, with a Rioplatense Spanish interface and real-time ddsAI support

    Formation of micro-groups of 5 in all neighborhoods of the target cities

    DDS candidates for mayoral and city council positions, with a local program based on the principles of this document

    Pilot implementation of digital participatory budgeting in the won municipalities

    PHASE 2: Provincial Consolidation (Years 3-6)

    With verifiable results from the DDS municipalities, the organization scales to the provincial level. Objective: to participate in elections for provincial legislatures and governorships in at least 5 provinces.

    Activities:

    Expansion to 1,000,000 verified members nationwide

    Implementation of the first binding citizen referendums on natural resource contracts in the provinces where DDS has representation

    Launch of the Provincial Development Bank (DDS) in the governed territories

    Network of schools with DDS and ddsAI education integrated into the curriculum

    PHASE 3: National Transformation (Years 6-10)

    With a consolidated presence in provinces and demonstrable government experience, DDS is participating in the national presidential and legislative elections with a comprehensive program.

    Activities:

    10,000,000 verified members (22% of the Argentine electorate)

    Constitutional reform to incorporate the revocable mandate, the binding referendum, and citizen ownership of natural resources

    Creation of the Argentine Sovereign Wealth Fund

    Renegotiation of external debt under citizen audit

    Implementation of Universal Basic Income

    3.2 The ddsAI Platform in Argentina: Information without Manipulation

    One of the most serious problems in Argentine democracy is media concentration: a few corporations control most of the mass media, and this concentration produces systematic disinformation, narratives aligned with the interests of the owners, and manipulation of public opinion.

    The ddsAI platform provides each Argentine DDS member with:

    ddsAI service

    Description

    Neutral and verified information

    Regarding every political, economic, or social decision that affects him, with cited primary sources

    Comparative analysis

    What did other countries with similar problems do, and what were the actual results?

    Disinformation detector

    Real-time verification of news and statements from politicians and media

    Policy simulator

    What would be the impact of this measure on my neighborhood, my income, my health?

    Verified reporting channel

    Secure and anonymous system for reporting corruption, with public monitoring of the case.

    Protected deliberative forum

    A space for debate without trolls, bots, or external algorithmic manipulation

    The platform operates on DDS's own servers, with publicly audited source code, no advertising, no data monetization, and no dependence on external governments or technology corporations.

    3.3 Expected Consequences of the DDS Model in Argentina

    Short-Term Consequences (1-3 years)

    Area

    Expected Consequence

    Political participation

    Increased participation in DDS elections from 68% to 85%+; creation of a culture of continuous participation

    Transparency

    Reduction of corruption in DDS municipalities by 60-70% (measured by citizen audits)

    Local economy

    Increased local productive credit, 15% reduction in informal unemployment in DDS areas

    Education

    Improved educational outcomes in schools with integrated ddsAI program

    Information

    Diversification of information sources; reduction of consumption of concentrated media

    Medium-Term Consequences (3-7 years)

    Area

    Expected Consequence

    External debt

    Renegotiation that reduces annual debt service by USD 5-8 billion

    Natural resources

    Increase in lithium and oil royalties from 3-5% to 25-30%, generating an additional USD 8-12 billion per year

    Poverty

    Poverty reduction to 15-20% thanks to Universal Basic Income and transitional employment

    Inequality

    Gini coefficient drops from 0.467 to 0.380-0.400 (comparable to Uruguay today)

    Inflation

    Stabilization at 5-8% annually, thanks to sovereign monetary policy and the end of dependence on the dollar.

    Long-Term Consequences (7-15 years)

    Area

    Expected Consequence

    Political model

    Argentina as a global benchmark for technologically enabled direct democracy

    Sovereign Wealth Fund

    Accumulation of USD 200-300 billion in the Argentine Sovereign Wealth Fund (lithium + oil)

    Sovereignty

    Total independence from the IMF; ability to finance public investment with own resources

    Welfare

    Human Development Index comparable to that of developed European countries

    Social cohesion

    Drastic reduction in violence, insecurity, and emigration of skilled young people

    SECTION IV: RESPONSES TO ANTICIPATED CRITICISMS

    'Is this utopian?'

    DDS RESPONSE: No. Every proposal in this program has verifiable precedents in other countries. Universal Basic Income exists in Alaska (Permanent Oil Fund). Sovereign wealth funds exist in Norway, Saudi Arabia, and Singapore. Digital direct democracy exists in Taiwan (vTaiwan), Estonia, and Iceland. Citizen debt audits were conducted in Ecuador. What we propose is not utopian: it is learning from what works in other countries and adapting it to Argentina.

    'Doesn't that scare off investors?'

    DDS RESPONSE: A sovereign, transparent state with strong institutions and active citizens is MUCH more attractive to serious productive investment than a corrupt and unstable state. What scares away productive investment is not sovereignty: it's corruption, unpredictability, and institutional weakness. DDS offers the exact opposite. Short-term speculative investment, however, may feel uneasy. And that's right.

    'How can DDS be prevented from becoming corrupted?'

    DDS RESPONSE: The DDS system is designed from its architecture to resist corruption: egalitarian collective ownership (one person = one non-transferable share), real-time revocable mandate, triple identity verification, full transparency of decisions on a public platform, independent expert groups, ddsAI systems that are impossible to bribe, and a reinforced constitutional separation of powers. No system is perfectly incorruptible, but DDS is the most resilient ever designed.

    'Isn't this socialism?'

    DDS ANSWER: No. DDS does not propose state ownership of all means of production. It proposes that natural resources—which belong to everyone by natural and legal right—generate well-being for all. The market works best in commerce, industry, services, and technology. DDS simply demands that the market be truly free: without monopolies, without corruption, and with complete information for all participants. That is not socialism. It is honest capitalism plus direct democracy.

     

    SECTION V: CONCRETE FIRST STEPS — WHAT TO DO NOW

    We don't wait for the 'perfect moment'. Change begins with the first groups of people who organize themselves, verify their identity, establish their micro-groups, and begin to practice direct democracy in their neighborhood, their workplace, their school.

    10 Concrete Actions for the First 6 Months:

    1. Register on the DDS platform and complete the three-level identity verification.
    2. Invite 4 trusted people (coworkers, neighbors, friends) to form the first micro-group of 5.
    3. Choose a specific local issue (state of the streets, neighborhood safety, food prices) and begin the first process of citizen deliberation and proposal.
    4. Connect with other micro-groups in the neighborhood or city to form the first group of 25.
    5. Identify reliable local candidates (people with verified competence in their area, no history of corruption) willing to apply under the DDS rules.
    6. Actively participate in specialist groups according to each person's area (lawyers to the legal group, doctors to the health group, etc.).
    7. Use ddsAI as a primary source of information, systematically verifying news from traditional media.
    8. Organize a neighborhood assembly (in person and/or digital) to present the DDS model to new citizens.
    9. Identify the region's natural resources and demand transparency regarding current exploitation contracts.
    10. Staying in DDS because the commitment is permanent: democracy is not an act of one day every 4 years, it is a daily practice.

    REMEMBER: Every great transformation began with a small group of people who decided things could be different. Argentina has everything it needs to be the first country in the world to implement technologically enabled direct democracy on a national scale. The time is now.

     

    CONCLUSION: A DIFFERENT ARGENTINA IS POSSIBLE

    Argentina is not condemned to repeat its history of crisis, debt, populism, and austerity. That cycle is not inevitable: it is the result of a political system that concentrates power in a few hands, excludes citizens from real decision-making, and allows the resources of all to be appropriated by a few.

    The program we have presented in these pages is not perfect. No human program is. But it is honest, based on real data, with solutions that have worked in other contexts and adapted to the Argentine reality, with automatic correction mechanisms when something doesn't work, and with the Argentine people as the protagonist and final arbiter of every decision.

    DirectDemocracyS is not here to save Argentina. It's here to give Argentinians the tools to save themselves, with complete information, real participation, and effective power over their own destiny.

    Argentina's wealth belongs to the Argentine people. The power to decide the country's future belongs to the Argentine people. And the responsibility to build that future also belongs to the Argentine people.

    This is not a party's proposal. It is the people's proposal, for the people, with the people.

    DirectDemocracyS

    directdemocracys.org · public.irectdemocracys.org

    Logic · Common Sense · Truth · Competence · Mutual Respect

    May 2026 Edition

     

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