Humanity is currently navigating a transformational era marked by deep, interconnected crises spanning political discourse, social cohesion, and moral understanding. The contemporary global economic paradigm is increasingly destabilised by wealth hyper-centralisation, a behavioural trend where resources are relentlessly accumulated and hoarded rather than circulated (Aalbers, 2016). This artificial scarcity is a primary driver of global inequality, social polarisation, and systemic despair (Stiglitz, Sen, Oxfam, 2024). "The 'smart city' agendas proposed by the applied sciences prioritise sensors, connectivity, and data-driven management, yet they systematically under-address the 'Human BIOS'—the moral and social foundations required for a thriving community (Green, 2019; Kitchin, 2014). This manuscript introduces the Daily Sustenance (Rizzq) Distribution System (DSDS), the core economic engine of Alam Happy Town (AHT). Moving beyond mere monetary exchange, this system operationalises the Islamic concept of Rizzq (holistic sustenance, encompassing food, goods, knowledge, aesthetics, and finance) through a daily downward circulation mechanism. Residents are mandated to divide their daily profit or savings (not total earnings) into three parts, distributing one-third to neighbours with lesser surplus. This paper meticulously details the mechanical implementation of DSDS, the psychological development of giving, the boundless spending liberty of the receiver under the "Zero-Balance Rule," and the rigorous social accountability protocols required to maintain the system. By aggressively synthesising modern well-being economics, the social determinants of health, and philosophical anthropology (the dialogical self and theories of recognition), and this research demonstrates that forcing the daily velocity of Rizzq establishes profound social solidarity, cures scarcity trauma, and mathematically engineers AHT into the wealthiest, most secure community in the world within three months. Keywords: Sustenance, Rizzq, DSDS, Eradicating Scarcity, Engineering Community, Wealth Circulation
Syed Aftab Alam (Mon,) studied this question.