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Global Direct Democracy

DirectDemocracyS

The political, economic, financial, and social program

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

A comprehensive critical analysis and roadmap for democratic transition

June 2026

Published under the DirectDemocracyS (DDS) global framework

Introduction: A message from DirectDemocracyS to the people of Saudi Arabia

Dear Saudi citizens, dear residents of this ancient land,

This program is brought to you by DirectDemocracyS (DDS), a global political system built on the firm foundations of genuine direct democracy, inalienable collective ownership, shared leadership, and respect for the will of the people. We firmly believe that the wealth and decision-making power of every country must forever remain, and exclusively, in the hands of its people.

We are not here to impose a Western or Eastern model, nor to erase your identity, heritage, noble Islam, and authentic Arab culture. We are here to provide tools and mechanisms that empower every citizen and resident to actively participate in shaping their future and the future of their children, in a peaceful, intelligent, safe, and gradual manner.

We categorically reject any form of violence, coup, or chaos. True and lasting change is not built by force, but by awareness, organization, and the collective will of the people.

Chapter One: A Critical Analysis of the Current Reality in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

1.1 The political system: absolute monarchy and the absence of popular representation

Since its founding in 1932, Saudi Arabia has been ruled by the Al Saud family under an absolute monarchy with no genuine national legislative elections, no licensed political parties, and no constitutionally guaranteed rights to freedom of expression or assembly. This makes it one of the most centralized systems of power in the world.

The system is officially based on the provisions of Islamic law, but the practical interpretation of these provisions is almost entirely subject to the will of the ruling family, which often makes religion a tool to justify power rather than a constraint on it.

Since Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman assumed de facto power in 2017, the kingdom has witnessed what has been described as "reform": allowing women to drive, opening entertainment venues, and partially amending the guardianship system. However, these reforms were imposed from the top down, granted by the authorities rather than being earned by the people, and were accompanied by an unprecedented wave of systematic repression of any dissenting voice.

Documented evidence and facts:

1.2 The Economy: Oil Wealth and the Diversification Crisis

Saudi Arabia possesses the world's second-largest proven oil reserves and is the world's largest oil exporter. However, the national economy remains hostage to one variable: the price of crude oil. When it rises, money flows and budgets flourish; when it falls, deep structural vulnerabilities are exposed.

Mohammed bin Salman launched Vision 2030 as a roadmap for economic diversification and reducing dependence on oil. By 2026, the vision had entered its third and final implementation phase. The reality is more complex: some indicators, such as the increased employment rate of Saudis and the growth of non-oil sectors, have been met or even exceeded. However, projects like NEOM and the Red Sea Project have experienced sharp budget cuts and timeline extensions, in addition to the general budget being based on an oil price breakeven point of around $80-90 per barrel, while actual prices have fluctuated below that.

Fundamental structural problems:

1.3 Social situation: Tensions beneath the surface of apparent calm

Saudi Arabia is home to approximately 36 million people, of whom about 40% are non-Saudis. The population is remarkably young: over 70% are over thirty years old. This new generation—educated, connected to the digital world, and imbued with the aspirations and demands of the modern age—finds itself facing a rigid set of political and social boundaries.

Key social challenges:

 

Chapter Two: DirectDemocracyS' Vision for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

2.1 Fundamental Non-Negotiable Principles

The DirectDemocracyS program stems from firm, uncompromising convictions:

2.2 The Fractal Micro-Groups Model: Building Democracy from the Ground Up

The fundamental organizational pillar of DirectDemocracyS is the fractional micro-group. The idea is simple in principle, yet profound in its impact:

Each group begins with five people who know and trust each other. This group of five is the basic unit of direct democracy. As it matures, each member branches out to form their own new group, resulting in five groups (25 people), then 125, then 625, then thousands, then millions—through natural fractional growth.

Applying the model in the Saudi context:

Key significance: These groups, in their formative stages, do not require government authorization, nor do they declare themselves in opposition to the state. They are educational, consultative, and organizational circles, operating gradually within available spaces until they reach a level of density and reach that makes them a popular force that cannot be ignored.

 

Chapter Three: The Political Program — From Absolute Monarchy to Popular Partnership

3.1 Diagnosis: The gap between legitimacy and authority

The true legitimacy of any regime stems from three sources: genuine service to the people, authentic representation of their will, and accountability and transparency. In Saudi Arabia, legitimacy still rests on a different triad: religion, distributed oil wealth, and selective repression. This equation is inherently fragile: when oil prices decline, legitimacy erodes, and when repression intensifies, latent anger accumulates.

3.2 The gradual path towards participatory democracy

Phase 1 (1-3 years): Building awareness and grassroots organization

Phase Two (3-7 years): Expansion and peaceful pressure

Phase Three (7-15 years): Institutional Transformation

3.3 allddsAI System: Democracy Protected from Manipulation

One of the greatest challenges to democracy in our time is media and digital manipulation: fake news, bias algorithms, and systematic disinformation campaigns. The allddsAI system addresses this challenge with a rigorous scientific methodology.

A concrete example: When the Micro-DDS group in Riyadh raises the issue of distributing oil revenues, allddsAI provides it with accurate figures on the size of production, revenues and government spending, compared to global models such as Norway and Alaska, so that members can make their decisions with full awareness, not ignorance or fear.

 

Chapter Four: The Economic Program — The Earth's Wealth for the People of the Earth

4.1 Restructuring Natural Resource Ownership

Oil and gas do not belong to the Al Saud family, nor to the Public Investment Fund as an unchecked state entity. They are a national resource owned by 30 million citizens and 10 million residents who build this nation through their hard work. The DDS program proposes the creation of:

Saudi People's Wealth Fund (SVWF)

A new, fully transparent sovereign wealth fund, managed by a popularly elected board of directors and directly monitored and held accountable by citizens, dedicated to three objectives:

A concrete example: the Norwegian model and beyond.

Norway established its sovereign wealth fund in 1990, and today it is the world's largest, with assets exceeding $1.6 trillion. It finances a third of the government budget and ensures a standard of living for all citizens. However, the Norwegian model remains top-down in its management; the DDS model goes further: the people decide how these funds are invested through mechanisms of direct democracy.

4.2 Economic Diversification: A Popular Roadmap

Technology and Digital Economy Sector

Saudi Arabia possesses exceptional qualities to become a regional technology hub: an educated youth population, advanced digital infrastructure, a strategic geographic location, and substantial financial reserves. DDS suggests:

Agriculture and Food Security Sector

The Kingdom relies on imports for approximately 80% of its food needs. This strategic vulnerability will be exacerbated by the increasing severity of climate change. DDS Map:

Renewable energy: From oil king to clean energy pioneer

Saudi Arabia possesses some of the world's most abundant solar radiation and vast expanses of desert. With the gradual decline of the oil era, the Kingdom has a historic opportunity to transform from the world's largest supplier of fossil fuels to the world's largest supplier of clean energy.

4.3 Labor market reform: The end of sponsorship and modern slavery

The sponsorship system is one of the most egregious violations of human rights in modern times. It ties a migrant worker's residency status to a single employer, effectively making the worker the property of the employer rather than a citizen of a state governed by the rule of law. DDS Scheme:

 

Chapter Five: The Financial Program — Managing the Nation's Wealth in the Hands of the Nation

5.1 Full financial transparency: The first and most important requirement

In Saudi Arabia today, the average citizen doesn't know how their oil revenues are spent, how the Public Investment Fund's investments are directed, or what the difference is between the state budget and the ruling family's wealth. This opacity isn't an administrative failing; it's a deliberate policy to maintain control.

The DDS program requires:

5.2 Fair Taxation: From Rentierism to Economic Citizenship

The current tax system relies heavily on value-added tax (VAT) (15%), which disproportionately burdens low-income earners, while there is no truly progressive income tax to distribute the burden fairly. DDS alternative:

5.3 Non-transferable collective ownership (NTCO) in the Saudi context

The NTCO principle in DDS simply means: National strategic assets—natural resources, vital infrastructure, and essential utility services—remain collectively owned by the people and are not to be sold or privatized to private or foreign entities. A Saudi application:

 

Chapter Six: The Social Program — Human Dignity First

6.1 Fundamental Human Rights: From Exception to Rule

The DDS presents fundamental human rights not as an imported Western demand, but as a natural extension of authentic Islamic and Arab values: justice, consultation, human dignity, integrity, and the prevention of injustice. In practice:

6.2 Protecting Diversity: Minorities, Regions, and Religions

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia encompasses a rich human diversity: Shia, Sunni, Sufi, numerous tribes, and regions with deeply rooted cultural identities. The DDS program is based on:

6.3 Education Reform: From Rote Learning to Critical Thinking

The current education system in the Kingdom suffers from two main problems: rote learning instead of critical thinking, and an excessive focus on religious education at the expense of science, technology, and innovation. DDS Scheme:

6.4 Health: From political privilege to guaranteed right

The current health system provides relatively decent services, but it relies on discretionary government spending rather than a legally guaranteed right, and suffers from severe disparities between urban and rural areas. DDS proposals:

 

Chapter Seven: DDS Technologies — The Digital Democratic Revolution

7.1 The DDS Platform: The Digital Backbone of Democracy

The DirectDemocracyS platform represents the digital infrastructure that enables the large-scale implementation of direct democracy. Its key features in the Saudi context are:

7.2 ddsAI: The neutral advisor for every citizen

Every Saudi citizen registered on the DDS platform receives free access to ddsAI, an artificial intelligence system designed on the principles of complete neutrality and reliable information:

A concrete example: A micro group in Jeddah is discussing a solar power plant project in their neighborhood, asking ddsAI about costs, benefits, and comparisons with similar projects in the UAE and Morocco — he answers them with accurate figures and reliable sources in two minutes.

7.3 GUMI-SV System: AI Universal Basic Income

With the rapid development of artificial intelligence and the decline of traditional job opportunities, the GUMI-SV (Universal Basic Income linked to social value) system is being proposed as a DDS solution to ensure human dignity in the age of automation:

 

Chapter Eight: The Executive Roadmap — From Dream to Reality

8.1 Zero Stage: Establishment (First Months)

Every great transformation begins with a first step. In the Saudi context, DDS's first step is:

8.2 First stage: Growth (1-5 years)

8.3 Second stage: Transition (5-15 years)

8.4 Expected obstacles and how to overcome them

The first obstacle: security repression

Response: The three-factor authentication system and full encryption on the DDS platform make it difficult to identify members. Activity begins in the educational and cultural sphere before the political one, thus reducing the legal grounds for prosecution.

The second obstacle: electronic censorship

Response: The DDS platform is designed to work across blocking circumvention technologies (VPN, Tor, decentralized network), with multiple mirror copies around the world.

The third obstacle: the discourse of "Western intellectual invasion"

Response: DDS does not have a Western agenda. Its philosophy intersects with the Islamic principle of Shura according to its deepest interpretations, and the established principle that wealth and power should remain with the people is an authentic Islamic Qur'anic principle.

The fourth obstacle: the acceptance of the status quo by some citizens

Response: DDS is not forced. It provides tools and information, and those who choose to participate do so of their own free will. Gradually, as people see the benefits of active participation in decisions that affect their daily lives, participation naturally increases.

 

Chapter Nine: Foreign Policy and International Relations

9.1 From Royal Diplomacy to People's Diplomacy

Saudi foreign policy is currently managed by the Al Saud family with almost complete disregard for public opinion. Wars and policies are waged in the name of the Kingdom without consulting its citizens. DDS establishes the principle that foreign policy must be based on public consultation on major issues.

9.2 Yemen File: Moral Responsibility and a Dignified Exit

The war in Yemen has led to a horrific humanitarian catastrophe for which the Kingdom bears a significant share of the responsibility. The DDS program offers a path out:

 

Chapter Ten: Expected Results and Desired Future

10.1 Over a ten-year horizon

If the DDS process were to begin in Saudi Arabia today, comparative models and data-driven projections suggest that ten years of organized and honest work could lead to:

10.2 On the horizon of twenty-five years: The kingdom we dream of

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in 2051 could be:

 

Conclusion: The final word belongs to the Saudi people.

Brothers and sisters in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,

This program is not intended to be imposed on you from the outside. It is simply presented for your discussion, critique, development, and adaptation to your specific circumstances. All the tools and proposals presented here are subject to modification and evolution based on the convictions of the Saudi people themselves.

What we insist on in principle is the following: Your wealth is yours. Your decision is yours. Your future is yours. No to a ruling family, no to multinational oil companies, and no to foreign powers interfering in the name of democracy with their eyes on your oil.

The DirectDemocracyS system is not fighting against Islam—it sees the noble Quranic principle of Shura (consultation) as the seed of authentic democracy within Islamic civilization. Nor is it fighting against Saudi Arabian identity—it sees it as a treasure that all humanity should be proud of.

The road is long, the obstacles are many, and the price may be high. But peoples who hold fast to their will, organize themselves, and reject fear with the weapons of knowledge and unity—these peoples cannot be defeated.

DirectDemocracyS is with you, step by step, on the path.

— DirectDemocracyS (DDS) — June 2026

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