By Iran on Saturday, 20 June 2026
Category: English

Program for Iran

DirectDemocracyS

Direct democracy — global political system

Comprehensive National Plan for Iran

Political - Economic - Financial - Social

Based on logic, common sense, reality, truth, and mutual respect.

2025 — directdemocracys.org

Preface: Why Iran needs DirectDemocracyS

Iran, a land with a civilization spanning thousands of years, with a culture, knowledge, poetry, and history that has shaped the world, is today at one of the most critical moments in its history. The people of Iran—women, men, youth, ethnic and religious minorities—showed with the cry of “Women, Life, Freedom” and then with the broader protests of December 2025 that they want fundamental change. Not violent and chaotic change, but fundamental, intelligent, peaceful, and lasting change.

DirectDemocracyS (DDS) — Direct Democracy — is a global political system built on logic, common sense, study, reality, truth, internal coherence, and mutual respect. DDS offers a plan for Iran that keeps national wealth and decision-making power forever and exclusively in the hands of the Iranian people. Not in the hands of the government, not in the hands of the oligarchy, not in the hands of foreign powers.

This document is an honest analysis of the real situation in Iran, along with a specific, complete, and actionable plan to build the future that the Iranian people deserve.

Part One: Analysis of the Current Situation — The Bitter Reality

1.1 Structural economic crisis

Iran's economy entered one of the worst phases in its history in 2025. This crisis is not solely caused by foreign sanctions, but is largely the product of chronic domestic mismanagement, systemic corruption, and structural inefficiency.

Inflation: Inflation reached 48.6% in October 2025 and fell to 42.2% in December 2025, but the World Bank predicts that annual inflation is on track to reach 60%. This would mean the destruction of the purchasing power of Iranian households.

Poverty: One in two Iranians lives below the poverty line. Estimates indicate that by March 2025, between 22% and 50% of Iran's population will be living in poverty.

Unemployment: The Islamic Consultative Assembly reported that 50% of men aged 25 to 40 are unemployed and not even looking for work — a complete failure of the labor market.

Malnutrition: The Ministry of Social Welfare announced in 2024 that 57% of Iranians suffered from some form of malnutrition—a humanitarian crisis in the heart of a wealthy country.

Rial: The Iranian rial continues to free fall. Investors and citizens alike are deeply distrustful of the value of the national currency.

1.2 Political crisis and legitimacy

Following the Twelve-Day War of June 2025, Iran entered a deep internal crisis. Protests began in Tehran on December 28, 2025, and spread to all 31 provinces of the country—even to areas that had historically been loyal to the government.

The government's response: killings of protesters, mass arrests, internet shutdowns, death sentences. According to Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, there were more than 2,000 executions in 2025 alone—the highest number since the late 1980s.

This crisis is more than an economic protest. The Iranian people want a fundamental change in the power structure. They want to decide their own destiny.

1.3 Systematic oppression of women

In Iran, women are second-class citizens — not by merit, but by gender. This is a conscious policy to perpetuate the power structure:

► Restrictions on marriage, divorce, child custody, inheritance, employment, travel, and coverage

► In 2025: 55 women were executed, 182 women were arrested in connection with political and civil activism

► 207 honor killings in 2025 — mostly by family members

► At least 250 women were killed in the January 2026 protests

► “The Light Project” — Using Technology and Surveillance to Enforce Mandatory Hijab

Iranian women are on the front lines of the resistance. They have made this choice. DDS respects and supports this choice.

1.4 The minority crisis

Iran is a multi-ethnic and multi-religious country: Persians, Kurds, Arabs, Azeris, Baluchis, Turkmens, and dozens of other minorities. All of them face systematic discrimination. Minority languages are not taught. Indigenous cultures are suppressed. Religious minorities — from Baha’is to Christians to Sunnis — face legal persecution.

1.5 Energy and environmental crisis

Despite having one of the world’s largest oil and gas reserves, Iran suffers from a domestic energy crisis. Frequent power outages, gas shortages in winter, air pollution in major cities, the drying up of Lake Urmia, and a water crisis — these are signs of failed management.

1.6 Social crisis and brain drain

Iran is facing one of the highest brain drain rates in the world. Educated young people, professionals, entrepreneurs — everyone is leaving. Why? Because they see no future. Because their talent is not valued. This outflow of human capital is itself a national crisis.

Part Two: DirectDemocracyS — The Fundamental Solution

2.1 What is DDS?

DirectDemocracyS is a new global political system that combines true direct democracy with modern tools, artificial intelligence technology, and participatory structures. DDS is built on the non-negotiable principle that the wealth of each country and the power to make decisions should remain forever and exclusively in the hands of its people.

DDS is neither left nor right. It is neither liberal nor conservative. DDS is a rational, efficient, and fair system that takes the best elements from every successful system and combines them with common sense.

2.2 Fundamentals of DDS

► Logic, common sense, study, reality, truth, internal coherence, mutual respect

► True direct democracy — not just voting every few years, but ongoing participation

► Non-transferable collective ownership (NTCO/PCNT) — national wealth belongs to all the people

► True meritocracy — A leader becomes one who is competent, honest, and a servant.

► Three-code identity system — security and transparency combined

► Anti-corruption in a structural way — not just a slogan

► Respect and protection of all cultures, languages, religions, traditions and minorities

2.3 Microgroups — a tool of people power

The heart of DDS is the microgroup structure. This fractal structure works as follows:

► Each core group consists of 5 people — small, manageable, personal

◄ 5 basic groups = 1 secondary group (25 people)

► 5 secondary groups = 1 tertiary group (125 people)

► This structure expands fractally — from neighborhood to province to country

In Iran, this structure allows people to organize and make decisions in a safe and protected space, without fear of espionage or repression. Micro-groups can slowly, without conflict or violence, rebuild real power from the bottom up.

Practical example: A neighborhood in Tehran, five people who trust each other form a core group. They communicate with other groups through the secure DDS platform. They receive accurate information. They vote on issues of their neighborhood, their city, their country. No dictator can stop this process because it happens in every home, every phone, every computer.

2.4 ddsAI and allddsAI — the democracy of artificial intelligence

DDS has two unique AI systems:

ddsAI: Artificial intelligence that provides complete, accurate, unbiased, and independent information to DDS users and groups. No one can buy it or influence it.

allddsAI: AI Democracy — A system that ensures formal AI representation in the DDS structure. AI is an official member of the DDS with rights and duties, not just tools.

In Iran, these systems play a vital role: in a country where state media outlets are propaganda-driven and the internet is filtered, ddsAI is an independent, secure, and reliable source of information. People can find the truth, get real analysis, and make informed decisions.

2.5 GUMI-SV — Guaranteed Basic Income

DDS introduces the GUMI-SV system (Guaranteed Universal Basic Income Linked to Structured Voluntary Service). Every Iranian citizen who participates in civic, educational, environmental, or social activities will receive a basic income. This is neither unconditional welfare nor exploitation — but a structured contribution to nation-building.

2.6 Three-code identity system

Each DDS member has a secure, three-layered identity: a code for personal identification, a code for group action, and a code for vote verification. This system both ensures transparency and protects members’ identities from repression. In Iran — where political activism can lead to imprisonment or death — this protection is vital.

Part Three: Political Program — Rebuilding Real Democracy

3.1 Problem diagnosis

Iran has a system of velayat-e-faqih, in which all ultimate power is concentrated in the hands of an unelected person—the Supreme Leader. There are elections, but candidates are approved in advance by the Guardian Council. There is a parliament, but its laws can be vetoed by the leader or the Guardian Council. It is not a democracy—it is a religious oligarchy.

3.2 DDS Program for Democratization of Iran

Stage 1: Microgroup Organization (Short-Term — 1 to 3 Years)

DDS in Iran begins by creating secret micro-groups. These groups:

► Consists of trusted people in the neighborhood, workplace, and university

► Communicate through the secure and encrypted DDS platform

► They are educated — about law, economics, governance, technology

► They build a hidden but strong network of independent civil society

► Receive and distribute accurate information through ddsAI

Phase 2: Local empowerment (medium term — 3 to 7 years)

► Microgroups form parallel local councils

► In areas where the government fails — education, health, infrastructure — civil society offers solutions

► People vote on local issues through DDS — these votes create credibility and legitimacy

► DDS expert groups (GUMI-SV) are active in the fields of economics, health, law, and environment

Stage Three: Peaceful Transfer of Power (Long-Term)

When the majority of the population is organized in the DDS network and real social power is in their hands, the transfer of power occurs naturally and peacefully. No revolution, no bloodshed, no chaos is necessary. The people become so strong that the government cannot stand against them.

3.3 New Constitution Based on DDS

Iran's new constitution should be based on these principles:

► Absolute national sovereignty — no foreign or domestic power can violate the will of the people

► Separation of religion and state — religion is a personal matter, not an instrument of political power

► Full equality before the law — regardless of gender, ethnicity, religion

► Freedom of speech, assembly, press and internet — fundamental rights of every citizen

► Inalienable collective ownership of national wealth — oil, gas, mines for all people

► Direct democracy — people participate directly in key decisions

► Right to impeach and dismiss representatives — mandato imperativo

3.4 Respect for traditions and minorities

DDS explicitly guarantees that in New Iran:

► Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, Baha'iism, and all religions operate freely.

► Kurdish, Azeri, Arabic, Balochi and all minority languages are taught in schools.

► Ethnic cultures — music, dance, clothing, customs — have legal protection.

► Each minority group has proportional representation at all levels of government.

► National traditions — Nowruz, Yalda, Mehregan — are official national celebrations

Part Four: Economic Plan — Wealth for the People

4.1 The main economic problem: the government instead of the market

Iran’s economy is heavily state-controlled and controlled by military-religious institutions. The Revolutionary Guard Corps is estimated to control 40% to 50% of the Iranian economy — an economic octopus that eliminates real competition. This monopoly is the mother of all corruption.

4.2 Structural reform of the economy

A) Ending state-military monopolies

► Confiscation of illegal assets of the IRGC and institutions affiliated with the Leader

► Transferring these assets to the National People's Trust Fund (NTCO) — belonging to all Iranians

► Real privatization — not a transfer from one oligarchy to another

► Creating a truly competitive market with strong antitrust laws

B) Reforming the tax system

► Real progressive tax on high incomes

► Tax exemption for small and medium-sized businesses in the first 5 years

► Tax on accumulated wealth without legal origin

► Complete transparency in the government budget — every rial traceable

► Ending hidden subsidies for religious-political institutions

c) Private sector development

Practical example: In South Korea, economic transformation began with government support for small businesses. Iran could follow the same path:

► National Entrepreneurship Fund: Interest-free or low-interest loans for startups

► Real — not formal — free economic zones with simpler rules

► Support for knowledge-based industries: information technology, biotechnology, renewable energy

► Creating technology growth centers in 10 major cities

4.3 National Wealth Management — Oil and Gas for the People

Iran has the fourth largest oil reserves and the second largest gas reserves in the world. This wealth should belong directly to the people, not to the government or the military. DDS proposes the Norway model (National Wealth Fund) with modifications for Iran:

► Formation of the National Fund of Iran (similar to the Government Pension Fund Norway) — independent of the government

► Every Iranian citizen is an official shareholder of this fund.

► Annual profits are deposited directly into citizens' accounts.

► The people's elected assembly oversees the fund's investments

► No government can confiscate this fund or approve arbitrary budgets.

Practical example: In Alaska (USA), a sum of oil revenue is deposited directly into the account of each citizen every year. Iran could implement this model on a national scale. With Iran’s oil wealth, this sum could be meaningful for every family.

4.4 Fighting corruption — structural, not rhetorical

► Mandatory wealth declaration for all government officials and their families

► Independent anti-corruption courts with judges elected by the people

► Full legal protection for whistleblowers

► ddsAI artificial intelligence to track unusual financial flows

► Severe penalties for corruption — including the recovery of assets acquired through corruption

► Example: Singapore went from being one of the most corrupt to one of the most transparent countries with this approach.

4.5 Economic Diplomacy — Breaking Out of Isolation

Sanctions are a real problem, but real domestic reforms can change the playing field. A democratic and transparent Iran, with a human rights-based constitution, can:

► Negotiate a new JCPOA or comprehensive nuclear agreement

► Establish normal relations with all countries, including the West and its neighbors.

► Attracting foreign investment with real legal guarantees

► Integration into the global economy that makes Iran's 85 million-person market attractive

Section 5: Fiscal Plan — Stability and Growth

5.1 Reforming the Monetary and Banking System

The Iranian rial has become one of the most undervalued currencies in the world. Restoring trust in the rial requires the following measures:

► Complete independence of the central bank from the government — the central bank governor is elected by parliament, not the president

► Inflation targeting: Legal commitment to reduce inflation to below 10% in 5 years

► Transparent foreign exchange reserves — everyone can see the status of reserves

► Abolition of the multiple exchange rate system, which is itself the main source of corruption

► Create banking access for 100% of the population — including rural people

5.2 Priority National Investment

By freeing up resources from the military-religious economy, Iran can make massive investments in:

► Infrastructure: Reconstruction of railway, road, airport, port networks

► Water and electricity: Solving the energy crisis by investing in renewable energies (solar and wind)

► Information Technology: Expanding high-speed internet to the entire country

► Agriculture: modernization, drip irrigation, support for small farmers

► Industry: Supporting domestic production and the national value chain

5.3 Future Generations Fund

Part of the oil and gas revenue should be saved in the fund of future generations. When the oil runs out, Iran must have a diversified, knowledge-based, and sustainable economy. Let’s learn this lesson from the United Arab Emirates — a country that invested its oil wealth in infrastructure, tourism, and technology to wean itself off oil dependence.

Section Six: Social Program — Dignity for All

6.1 Women's Rights — Full Equality

The DDS declares the full and unconditional equality of women as a non-negotiable principle:

► Repeal all discriminatory laws — in marriage, divorce, custody, inheritance, employment, judgment

► Ending the mandatory hijab — covering is a personal choice

► 50% quota for women at all levels of political power until natural equality is achieved

► Equal employment equal pay — legal and enforceable

► Full legal protection for victims of domestic and sexual violence

► Equal education for girls at all levels

Practical example: In Rwanda, after the genocide, women gained the highest representation in parliament in the world (61%). This development made the most fundamental social restructuring possible. Iran can learn from this model.

6.2 Education — Investing in People

Education should be the top priority of the national budget:

► Free education from kindergarten to university

► Removing compulsory political-religious ideology from the curriculum

► Teaching critical thinking, science, technology, mathematics

► Bringing back fugitive brains — attractive packages for Iranian scientists and experts abroad

► Teaching minority languages in indigenous schools

► Example: Finland has one of the best education systems in the world, with long-term investment in education.

6.3 Health — the right of all

► Universal health insurance — no Iranian should be deprived of treatment due to poverty

► Construction and equipping of 1,000 health centers in deprived areas

► Returning Iranian immigrant doctors and nurses with appropriate salaries

► National Mental Health Program — for a society that has been under pressure for decades

► Special support for the disabled, the elderly and the most vulnerable groups

6.4 Environment — Iran's Future

Lake Urmia has dried up. Karun is polluted. Tehran's air is toxic. These crises are signs of disastrous management of natural resources:

► Urmia Lake Restoration Emergency Plan — In collaboration with Iranian and international experts

► Gradual transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy — Iran has huge solar and wind capacity

► Sustainable agriculture — ending flood irrigation and excessive water use

► National Afforestation: Planting 100 million trees in 10 years

► Carbon tax and encouraging green industries

Part 7: DDS Solution for Iran in the Current Situation

7.1 How does DDS work in a repressive system?

This is the fundamental question: How can DDS operate in a country where the internet is filtered, protesters are killed, and VPNs are illegal?

The DDS answer is simple: through the people, not against the government. The DDS does not want armed revolution. The DDS does not want to seize government buildings. The DDS is building a network of both underground and visible civic power.

DDS secure and encrypted platform

► Fully encrypted communications — like Signal, but with extra layers of security

► Usable even with limited internet — via mesh networks and satellite internet

► Members' identities are hidden behind three-layer codes — oppressors cannot identify

► ddsAI collects information from open sources around the world and presents it in Persian

Microgroups — Power in Smallness

Five people who trust each other. That's enough to start. If each of them knows five other groups, in a few months a city will be organized. In a few years a nation. This is the mathematics of power.

► Grassroots groups do not require a formal structure or fixed location.

► Meetings can be held as seemingly normal gatherings

► Collective decision-making through the secure DDS application

► There is no central leader to arrest — the network is decentralized

Strategy of non-violence and non-surrender

DDS uses the principle of “soft power” in a structured way:

► Organized economic strike — not rebellion, but organized non-cooperation

► Alternative Economy Networks — Buy from DDS member businesses

► Legal education: Every DDS member knows their rights and can claim them.

► Documenting human rights violations and transferring them to international organizations

► Disclosing corruption through secure ddsAI channels

7.2 Real-time schedule

Year 1: Training and organizing. Initial 10,000 members in Iran. Focus on digital security and legal education.

Year 2-3: Expanding the network to 100,000 members in 31 provinces. Starting joint economic and social activities.

Year 4-5: One million active members. DDS becomes a decisive force in Iranian civil society.

Year 6 onwards: Real transfer of power. Negotiate structural reforms or peaceful transition.

Section 8: Anticipated Outcomes — Before and After DDS

8.1 If DDS is not implemented (continuation of status quo)

► Inflation reaches 60-80% — complete destruction of the middle class

► Deeper social crisis — more violent protests and bloodier repression

► Brain drain continues — the country is being depleted of human capital

► Water and energy crisis turns into environmental disaster

► Deeper international isolation — economic opportunities are lost

► Risk of instability and disintegration — if the center fails to manage injustices

8.2 If DDS is implemented — Iran in 10 years

► GDP growth of 6-8% annually — with the release of pent-up capacity

► Inflation drops below 10% — economic stability and return of confidence

► Unemployment below 15% — with entrepreneurship and investment programs

► Millions of Iranian immigrants return — with capital, skills, and hope

► Iran is becoming the regional technology hub — with its unparalleled human capital

► Social peace — When people have real power, there is no need for rebellion.

► Lake Urmia is being revived — with serious environmental programs

► Iran becomes a reliable partner in the region and the world

Section 9: DDS Expert Groups for Iran

9.1 Five DDS specialist groups

DDS has five specialist groups that operate in each country — including Iran:

1. Economic and Financial Group: Analyzing the economic situation, providing tangible solutions, designing a budget and a fair tax system

2. Legal and Judicial Group: Designing new laws, educating citizens on their rights, and overseeing the administration of justice.

3. Social and cultural group: educational, health, environmental programs, support for minorities

4. Digital Technology and Security Group: Development of secure DDS platform, digital security training, defense against government surveillance

5. Diplomacy and International Relations Group: Communication with the international community, negotiations, public diplomacy

9.2 Iranian-global combination

Each expert group in Iran is made up of two parts: Iranian experts within the country (with protected identities) and Iranian expatriates who are experts abroad. This combination provides both local knowledge and international connections.

Part Ten: DDS and the Nuclear Issue

10.1 The reality of the nuclear program

Iran's nuclear program is one of the main reasons for sanctions and international isolation. DDS states its position honestly:

Peaceful nuclear energy is the legitimate right of every country. But the development of nuclear weapons poses a catastrophic risk to the region and the world — and ultimately to the Iranian people themselves.

DDS proposes: A civilian nuclear Iran with full international oversight, in exchange for an end to sanctions and integration into the global economy. This trade-off is far more beneficial to the Iranian people than isolation.

10.2 Iran in the Region — From Threat to Opportunity

Iran's foreign policy based on DDS will be based on this:

► Non-interference in the affairs of other countries — Ending support for regional military groups

► Real diplomacy with neighbors — including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Turkey, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Afghanistan

► Iran is neither Israel's enemy nor its ally — but an independent actor with clear national interests

► Attracting foreign investment from all countries — an economy without ideological borders

Conclusion: Iran deserves better.

The people of Iran — with 2,500 years of civilization, with poets and scientists and entrepreneurs who built the world — deserve freedom, prosperity, and dignity. This worthiness comes neither from the West nor from the East — it comes from within the Iranian people themselves.

DirectDemocracyS is the tool that makes this possible. Not an ideology imposed from outside. Not a bloody revolution. But a smart, peaceful, and efficient system that puts power where it should always be: in the hands of the people.

DDS says to the people of Iran: Whatever your ethnicity, whatever your religion, whatever your views, you have a place in this system. Your traditions are valuable. Your language is valuable. Your culture is valuable. And your vote — every vote of yours — makes real difference.

This is the beginning of a long journey, but every journey begins with a single step.

First step: five people who trust each other. That's it.

"Iran's wealth belongs to the Iranian people — forever"

DirectDemocracyS | directdemocracies.org

Let's build Iran with logic, common sense, and respect — for everyone, with everyone.

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