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This book is a political analysis, documentary, and political thriller examining the gradual transformation of Europe from a community of sovereign democracies into a technocratically governed system increasingly detached from democratic consent. At its core lies a fundamental contrast: American democracy, rooted in popular sovereignty, constitutional limits, and political accountability, versus a European oligarchy whose authority is exercised through unelected institutions, judicial self-empowerment, and economic coercion. Tracing the history of European integration, the author dismantles…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book is a political analysis, documentary, and political thriller examining the gradual transformation of Europe from a community of sovereign democracies into a technocratically governed system increasingly detached from democratic consent. At its core lies a fundamental contrast: American democracy, rooted in popular sovereignty, constitutional limits, and political accountability, versus a European oligarchy whose authority is exercised through unelected institutions, judicial self-empowerment, and economic coercion. Tracing the history of European integration, the author dismantles the myth of inevitable centralization and exposes the structural mechanisms by which national parliaments have been weakened, democratic responsibility diluted, and political power transferred to bodies beyond effective public control. Particular attention is given to the European Commission, the role of supranational courts, and the emergence of what the author terms a democratic illusion: elections without real choice, transparency without accountability, and governance without consent. The book combines political theory, constitutional analysis, and economic critique with contemporary developments, including war financing, debt mechanisms, frozen state assets, lobbying structures, rising political salaries, and the parallel social decline across Europe. Growing homelessness, the collapse of affordable housing, and the widening gap between political elites and ordinary citizens are presented not as isolated failures, but as systemic consequences of a technocratic order insulated from popular pressure. This work is neither anti-European nor anti-American. It defends Europe as a civilization of nations, legal traditions, and democratic self-government, while warning against the creation of a centralized European state that undermines those very foundations. Drawing on the intellectual tradition of Madison, Tocqueville, de Gaulle, and Charles Pasqua, the book argues for political restraint, national responsibility, and democratic renewal from below. Written for politically engaged readers, scholars, students, and policymakers, this book seeks not to abandon Europe, but to confront the forces that are hollowing it out from within.
Autorenporträt
Heinz Duthel is a European author and political analyst whose work focuses on democracy, sovereignty, and the transformation of power in the modern West. Educated in philosophy and the social sciences, he has lived and worked across Europe, Asia, and Africa, developing a comparative perspective on political systems and institutional governance. His writing examines the tension between national self-government and supranational authority, particularly within the European Union and transatlantic relations. Drawing on the intellectual traditions of Madison, Tocqueville, and de Gaulle, Duthel argues for democratic accountability, constitutional limits, and political renewal rooted in the consent of the governed. His work is independent of party politics and lobbying interests.