The inner workings of the European Union are as much a mystery to  those living within its confines as they are to those of us who reside  elsewhere. The Brussels bureaucracy that sets many of the EU’s policies  feels remote to its citizens, yet the influence of its decisions can  extend worldwide and throughout the global marketplace.
In this timely and insightful essay, Hans Magnus  Enzensberger blends reportage, argument, and analysis in order to make  sense of the EU’s present political and economic roles and examine the  EU’s origins and inherent contradictions. In Enzensberger’s view, Europe  is involved in a project without precedent—the first non-violent form  of post-democratic governance, which is trying to abolish the diversity  of Europe and impose a regime that is not accountable to its citizens.  Its often bizarre and arbitrary rules amount to a soft but relentless  guardianship, dictating how half a billion people should live their  lives regardless of their own political opinions and traditions.  Enzensberger here offers a strategy for approaching this modern  monster—at once gentle and giant, friend and foe.
Praise for Enzensberger
“How should one cope with Germany? Let’s ask Hans  Magnus Enzensberger. . . . One can only marvel at his permanent  alertness, his tone of cold enragement, the dimensions of his hunger for  experience, most of all however, one can only marvel at his sense of  important issues. For 50 years, time and again Enzensberger has posed  the right questions to German society. . . . No one should ever believe  Enzensberger is on his side. Whenever someone makes a clear distinction  between Good and Evil, Enzensberger will jump out of his cover and  shout: It’s not that simple.”—Florian Illies, Die Zeit
      Table of Contents
                         1. Praise Where It’s Due 
2. Official Language
3. The Commission’s Peculiarities and Those of Its Critics
4. A Look at the Executive Floors
5. Esprit du corps
6. The Half-Forgotten History
7. It’s the Economy, Stupid!
8. Entering a Post-Democratic Era
9. A Conversation between A, Monsieur de *** of the Commission, and B, the Author, at the Fattoria del Chianti, Rue de Archimède, Brussels
Some Sources
                    2. Official Language
3. The Commission’s Peculiarities and Those of Its Critics
4. A Look at the Executive Floors
5. Esprit du corps
6. The Half-Forgotten History
7. It’s the Economy, Stupid!
8. Entering a Post-Democratic Era
9. A Conversation between A, Monsieur de *** of the Commission, and B, the Author, at the Fattoria del Chianti, Rue de Archimède, Brussels
Some Sources