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Our mission

The democratic
revolution plan

Puzzld is not just a democratic platform. It is a movement for peace, human rights, and a fairer, safer world for every person on earth.

Most platforms give people a way to shout. Very few give them a way to think. Signing a petition takes ten seconds. Changing something takes understanding — shared understanding, built up together, with evidence, over time.

That is what Puzzld is for. Not signatures. Not outrage. Collective intelligence — people building on each other's knowledge, piece by piece, until something real emerges.

"Communities have always known what's wrong. They've rarely had the right place to work it out together — and even more rarely a mechanism that makes those with power actually respond."

The magpying principle

How knowledge builds on itself

Magpies collect. Each piece on its own means little. But assembled together — arranged, connected, built upon — they become something that has weight. That is how Puzzld's Topics work.

01
Someone starts a topic
Any subject. Any depth. Space exploration. Mental health in schools. Water on Mars. The sewage in your local river. There are no limits to the level of specificity.
02
Others add to it
Post a finding. Ask a question. Propose an idea. Challenge an assumption. Every contribution has to link evidence — a study, a source, a report. Opinion without evidence is still welcome, but clearly marked as such.
03
The best rises
Upvoting surfaces the most useful contributions. Not the most popular opinion — the most useful contribution. A peer-reviewed study beats a hot take. Evidence compounds.
04
It goes as deep as it needs to
Topics have subtopics. Subtopics have subtopics. A discussion about Climate Science can drill into Arctic Ice Loss, then into Permafrost Methane Release, then into the specific feedback loops that keep scientists up at night. The depth is unlimited.
05
Local, regional, national
Puzzld is not just a national platform. A topic about pothole repair in Camden is as legitimate as one about international climate finance. Communities find each other at the right scale.
06
When ready — it escalates
When a community has built enough understanding and enough consensus, they raise a formal Issue. That is when Puzzld's accountability mechanism kicks in. The thinking comes first. The action follows.
The two tracks

Topics and Issues — how they connect

Topics — where thinking happens

500+ structured discussion spaces across every field. Science, society, environment, law, economics, philosophy, sport. Unlimited nesting. Anyone can create a topic or subtopic.

This is where communities build shared understanding. Evidence-based, threaded, permanent. No algorithm. No ads. No one deciding what you see.

Issues — where action happens

When a community has built enough understanding and wants to formally escalate — they raise an Issue. Set the scope (local, regional, national), describe the problem, link the evidence.

At the threshold — 500 voices locally, 2,000 regionally, 10,000 nationally — Puzzld formally submits it in writing. Their response is published permanently.

How it builds

From individual thought to collective action

1
The beginning
Someone starts a conversation
A topic opens. It might be "Water on Mars" or "Sewage discharge in the River Wye." It might be the future of the NHS or the ethics of AI. Someone posts a finding, a question, or an idea. It begins.
2
The building
Others add what they know
Evidence is linked. Assumptions are challenged. Ideas branch into subtopics. Someone from the community knows something nobody else knew. That knowledge is now permanent and connected to everything that came before it.
3
The consensus
Something real emerges
Not agreement — understanding. The community understands the problem well enough to propose something. The best proposals rise. The weakest ones are challenged. The result is not a slogan but a position, with evidence behind it.
4
The escalation
The community decides to act
They raise an Issue. They set the scope — is this for the local council, the regional authority, or national government? The threshold differs by scope. When they reach it, Puzzld submits formally.
5
The record
Everything is permanent
The submission, the response — or the silence — is published. The community's work does not disappear. It does not fade from a feed. It sits permanently on the public record, alongside everything that was built to get there.
The bigger point

The people will make their change.

Not by waiting for politicians to act. Not by signing something and hoping. By doing what humans have always done when they are at their best — thinking together, sharing what they know, building on each other, and refusing to let the result be ignored.

Puzzld is not a protest. It is not a petition. It is a permanent, structured, evidence-based record of what communities actually think — built by those communities, owned by no one, available to everyone.

That is harder to dismiss than a march. Harder to ignore than a trending hashtag. Harder to outlast than any individual campaign. And it compounds — every piece of knowledge built on Puzzld makes the next piece easier to build.

Explore topics Raise an issue
The accountability mechanism

What "formally submitted" actually means

This is the question every serious platform has to answer. Here is our honest, specific answer.

When 500 voices are reached

Puzzld prepares a formal written submission to the relevant authority — the appropriate government minister, local council, regulator, or institution. It includes the issue statement, the number of voices, community-voted solutions, and any evidence provided by contributors.

After submission

The submission, date, authority, and any response are published on Puzzld and remain permanently visible. If they respond — documented. If they do not — that silence is documented too. The record belongs to everyone and cannot be deleted.

The honest limitation

Puzzld cannot legally compel a response. No platform can. What we can do is make non-response publicly visible, permanently. Institutional silence in public becomes its own form of accountability. We also coordinate media outreach on key submissions.

Why this is different

Most petitions fail because there is no mechanism — just a number. Puzzld creates a structured, documented process. Every step is public. Over time, the record itself becomes pressure. An institution that ignores Puzzld submissions is building a public trail of indifference.

Moderation & integrity

How we protect the platform

A community intelligence platform is only as trustworthy as its moderation. Here is exactly how Puzzld handles it.

Zero tolerance

Hate speech, discrimination, or content promoting harm is removed immediately. No exceptions. This includes content that targets people based on race, ethnicity, religion, gender, sexuality, nationality, or any other protected characteristic.

Issues must target systems — not people

This is the most important distinction Puzzld makes. A valid issue challenges a policy, institution, or system. An invalid issue targets an ethnic, racial, national, or religious group. Evidence does not change this. You cannot use data to justify the targeting of a group of people — that is discrimination regardless of what supports it.

The legitimate version rule

If a submission targets a specific group, we ask: is there a legitimate version of this concern? "Reform the asylum system" is a valid policy debate. "Remove all people of [nationality/ethnicity]" is not — regardless of the argument attached to it. We reject the latter and may suggest the former.

Issue review

Every submitted issue is reviewed before publication. Duplicate, misleading, or bad-faith submissions are rejected with explanation. We check for accuracy, constructive framing, and compliance with our guidelines.

Identity & anti-manipulation

Votes are tied to verified accounts. One person, one voice per issue. Coordinated brigading and bot activity are monitored and removed.

No political bias

Puzzld does not favour or suppress issues based on political alignment. Conservative, progressive, local, global — any issue that follows our guidelines is published. The community decides what matters through voting, not us.

Legal responsibility

Puzzld formally submits issues to government at 10,000 voices. We have a legal and ethical obligation to ensure nothing submitted under our name violates the Equality Act 2010 or the Public Order Act 1986. Discriminatory content is not just rejected — it is never escalated under any circumstances.

Public roadmap

What we are building next

Puzzld is early. Here is what exists, what is coming, and what we are planning — honestly and publicly.

LiveTopics — 500+ topics across 12 root categories, unlimited nesting, evidence-based discussion
LiveIssues — raise, vote, discuss, and formally escalate with geographic scoping (local/regional/national)
LiveVerified accounts, dark/light mode, progressive web app
SoonFirst formal government submission — the first issue to reach 500 voices
SoonIssue following — subscribe to specific issues and get notified on milestones
SoonMonthly transparency reports — public data on platform activity and moderation
PlannedLocal issues — location-based filtering so communities can organise around what affects them directly
PlannedFirst Puzzld product — designed to benefit people and fund the platform permanently
PlannedInstitutional accounts — verified organisations can co-sign issues and add credibility