{"id":67153,"date":"2026-06-08T09:05:12","date_gmt":"2026-06-08T13:05:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/?p=67153"},"modified":"2026-06-08T09:06:09","modified_gmt":"2026-06-08T13:06:09","slug":"the-end-of-the-european-union-as-we-know-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/?p=67153","title":{"rendered":"<h1>The End of the European Union as We Know It<\/h1>"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><!--more--><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/Screenshot-2026-06-08-at-9.05.46-AM.png\" alt=\"\" width=\"567\" height=\"381\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-67155\" srcset=\"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/Screenshot-2026-06-08-at-9.05.46-AM.png 567w, https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/Screenshot-2026-06-08-at-9.05.46-AM-300x202.png 300w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 567px) 100vw, 567px\" \/><\/p>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>Europe 2.0, Beyond Brussels:<br \/>\nThe End of the European Union<br \/>\nas We Know It<\/strong><\/h1>\n<h3><em>Europe\u2019s EU project has reached its limits: a centralized bureaucracy replacing politics itself, draining legitimacy, and pointing back toward sovereign, competitive states.<\/em><\/h3>\n<p>By Frank-Christian Hansel<br \/>\nAmerican Greatness<\/p>\n<p>Europe has reached the end of an era. <span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Specify historical context\">Not the end of its history, but the end of its false form.<\/span>\u00a0For decades, the European Union served as the great substitute project of a continent that no longer dared to think politically. It promised peace without power, order without a people, unity without roots, and prosperity without cost. That was its founding lie, and it was a lie from the very beginning.<\/p>\n<p>Political order does not grow out of procedural routines, commission papers, or moral self-incantation. It grows out of peoples, interests, borders, loyalties, and the willingness to defend what is one\u2019s own. Legitimate authority rests on a people and its consent, not on an apparatus and its expertise.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Keep the subject and main verb together\">That older idea\u2014that government draws its life from the governed rather than from the competence of its administrators\u2014is precisely what Brussels has spent two generations trying to administer away.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>That is why today\u2019s EU is not the high point of European history but its bureaucratic state of exhaustion. It is too centralized to be free and too artificial to be binding. It commands an immense body of rules and possesses no sustaining political soul. It has institutions, but not the kind of historically grown legitimacy that holds a community together across generations.<\/p>\n<p>And so it answers every crisis with the same reflex: more centralization, more redistribution, more standardization, more discipline. What is sold as the solution is only the problem enlarged.<\/p>\n<p>Europe is not failing because\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use simpler phrasing\">there is too little Brussels<\/span>. Europe is failing because there is too much Brussels. It is failing because of a political class that no longer sees the continent as a historical space but as an object of administration. It is failing because of an ideology that treats every organically grown difference as a defect and therefore regards peoples, traditions, and national particularities as raw material to be processed. And it is failing because of a functional elite that has learned to disguise power as morality and to pass off\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid redundancies\">its own<\/span>\u00a0interests as universal values.<\/p>\n<p>There is a name for this kind of governance: the administrative state\u2014the permanent, unelected layer that survives every election, answers to no voter, and grows whether the public wants it to or not. Brussels is that layer raised to\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Correct the article\">the\u00a0<\/span>continental power and freed from even the inconvenience of a national electorate. There is no European\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Maintain the agreement\">demos<\/span>\u00a0to vote the managers out. That is not a flaw in the design. It is the design.<\/p>\n<p>The real scandal of Europe today is not even its material mismanagement but its intellectual arrogance. The Union behaves as though it could suspend history\u2014as though cultures could be harmonized like technical standards, as though political loyalty could be decreed the way one issues a packaging regulation. As though a continent of radically different historical experiences, economic structures, demographic trajectories, and security realities could be pressed into one standardized form without damage. Yet the damage is already visible. The EU is not unifying Europe. It is wearing it down.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Enhance clarity of purpose\">To see why, it helps to return to a text that saw the whole thing coming.<\/span>\u00a0In 2011, long before today\u2019s disruptions, the German social scientist Gunnar Heinsohn published an essay whose title I have borrowed and broadened here: \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.achgut.com\/artikel\/europa_20_neuzuschnitt_der_alten_welt\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\">Europa 2.0: Neuzuschnitt der Alten Welt<\/a>\u201d (Europe 2.0: Recutting the Old World). It was written in the first panic of the euro rescues, and it has aged with uncomfortable precision.<\/p>\n<p>Heinsohn\u2019s argument was not, in the first place, a complaint about Brussels. It was an argument about arithmetic. He began with the chain of liabilities that the productive European middle class\u2014the net taxpayers, the people who put in more than they take out\u2014had quietly been made to guarantee. First, the bank rescues of 2008.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Enhance clarity and precision\">Then the Greek bailout and the great euro backstops of 2010, which shielded bondholders and the comfortable classes of the periphery at the expense of taxpayers who were never asked.<\/span>\u00a0Then the implicit guarantees extended to the aging, shrinking states of the European East.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Enhance clarity of population support\">And beneath all of it, an ever-growing domestic population to be supported for life.<\/span>\u00a0The decisive point was simple and merciless: when all these promises\u2014upward, downward, and outward\u2014come due at once, no one will be left to bail out the people who were made to do the bailing.<\/p>\n<p>The mechanism is general. A government that collectivizes debt, anonymizes liability, and blurs responsibility will always end by taxing the people who never agreed to the\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Consider a more formal word\">bad<\/span>\u00a0decisions of others. Heinsohn merely showed that the European Union had written this principle into its very constitution. Any order that treats difference primarily as a financing problem must degenerate into a transfer machine.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid overused expressions\">And a transfer machine is, sooner or later, politically hated\u2014<\/span>because it morally expropriates the productive and politically infantilizes the weak, rewarding neither virtue nor reform but only dependency. What it produces in the end is not solidarity but resentment: a bureaucratically managed exhaustion of the common good.<\/p>\n<p>But Heinsohn\u2019s deeper move was to set this fiscal machine on top of a demographic one\u2014and here the argument becomes genuinely radical. The transfers are not merely unjust; they are mathematically doomed, because the population expected to honor them is collapsing. Across much of Europe, and most severely in the East, birth rates have run far below replacement for two generations. The productive base shrinks while the dependent base grows and ages. You cannot underwrite an expanding empire of guarantees with a contracting nation of guarantors. The numbers do not forgive ideology.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use positive phrasing\">From this, Heinsohn drew a conclusion that polite Europe still refuses to say aloud: not all human capital is equal, and a civilization that loses its capacity to attract and cultivate talent does not stay rich for long.<\/span>\u00a0Innovation is decided at the top of the distribution, by the density of the highly capable, not by raising the average.<\/p>\n<p>Importing large numbers of low-skill dependents, he argued, costs billions and replaces not a single first-rate mind, while a society that selects for ability\u2014as the Swiss and the Danes already do\u2014renews itself. Strip away the provocation and a plainer proposition remains: a serious country runs immigration in\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid redundancies\">its own<\/span>\u00a0interest, as a selective system, choosing the people it needs rather than absorbing whoever happens to arrive. A civilization unwilling to reproduce itself has, in any case, already mortgaged\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid redundancies\">its own<\/span>\u00a0future. Whatever one makes of these claims, Heinsohn\u2019s 2011 essay reads today less like a period piece than like a forecast.<\/p>\n<p>What, then, is the alternative? Heinsohn\u2019s answer was\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Combine negative statements\">not \u201cmore Europe,\u201d and it was not<\/span>\u00a0\u201cback to the nation-states of 1914.\u201d It was a recutting\u2014a deliberate sorting of the continent into political spaces that can actually function, each organized around two\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Consider a more formal word\">hard<\/span>\u00a0criteria: a currency that is genuinely sound and a society genuinely attractive to the talent it needs.<\/p>\n<p>His model for both was not an abstraction. It was a sort of Switzerland.<\/p>\n<p>Consider what Heinsohn admired in it. Its central bank does not monetize the debt of badly run governments; it\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use stronger verb for clarity\">will not take their paper as collateral and will not<\/span>\u00a0buy it\u2014which is exactly why a country of fewer than nine million can hold a reserve-grade currency. Sound\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Clarify sound money concept\">money,<\/span>\u00a0enforced by the refusal to bail anyone out. Its cantons do not subsidize one another into permanent dependency; there is no grand equalization scheme shuffling money from the competent to the connected. Instead, the cantons compete\u2014for innovative firms, for capable workers, for investment\u2014and grow their revenue by winning that competition rather than by lobbying for a larger share of someone else\u2019s. Tax competition, fiscal discipline, and\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Clarify the function of concepts\">federalism as<\/span>\u00a0a sport rather than a shakedown. And immigration authority sits at the local level: it is the communes, not a distant central ministry, that decide who settles where\u2014which is why the children of Swiss immigrants tend to perform like Swiss children rather than like a permanent underclass parked wherever a bureaucrat finds room.<\/p>\n<p>The list of features is easy to state: sound money, decentralized authority, local control over who settles where, tax competition in place of redistribution, and a central government that coordinates only the few things that genuinely must be coordinated and leaves the rest to the level closest to the decision. The European word for\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Clarify the meaning of &quot;this&quot;\">this<\/span>\u00a0is\u00a0<em>subsidiarity<\/em>. Heinsohn\u2019s quiet provocation was to note where it actually survives\u2014not in the European Union, but in the small, stubborn confederation that the Union spent two decades trying to fine, pressure, and squeeze into compliance.<\/p>\n<p>Heinsohn then took the principle to its conclusion and asked what Europe would look like if it were organized by those criteria rather than by inherited borders. The criteria themselves are the point, and they are worth stating plainly, because they describe a direction rather than a destination:<\/p>\n<p>A viable space, in his account, is one that can secure its own sound currency without monetizing anyone\u2019s debt; one attractive enough to draw and keep the talent it needs rather than merely the dependents it acquires; one governed closely enough to its people that consent is real and not merely assumed; and one freed from open-ended liability for the failures of others. Spaces that can meet those tests cohere on their own. Spaces that cannot have to be held together by transfers and decree\u2014which\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Correct the subject-verb agreement\">is<\/span>\u00a0the very\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Maintain the agreement\">condition<\/span>\u00a0that Europe is now exhausting itself trying to maintain.<\/p>\n<p>From this, he sketched a deliberately provocative map\u2014<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use &quot;neither\/nor&quot;\">not a forecast and not<\/span>\u00a0a plan, but a way of making the criteria concrete. He imagined the continent re-associating into a handful of post-national economic and cultural spaces, sorted by affinity and by their capacity to meet those\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Replace with\">tests:<\/span><\/p>\n<p>A northern federation\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Improve fluency\">gathering<\/span>\u00a0the Scandinavian countries with the prosperous German north. An Alpine federation built around the Swiss core, drawing in the wealthy regions of southern Germany, Austria, and northern Italy that already share its economic temperament. A revived commonwealth across the old Polish-Lithuanian space to the east. A Mediterranean union with its own southern currency and\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid redundancies\">its own<\/span>\u00a0vocation, reaching from the Iberian Atlantic to the eastern shore of the sea. And where the old centers of the postwar order remained, a residual\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Correct the capitalization\">western<\/span>\u00a0bloc around Berlin, Paris, and London. He even allowed himself the heresy of supposing that productive regions might one day choose, politically, which space to belong to\u2014that belonging itself might follow function rather than inheritance.<\/p>\n<p>I set this out as Heinsohn set it out: as a thought experiment offered to clarify a direction\u2014not as anyone\u2019s\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Remove the comma\">program, and<\/span>\u00a0certainly not as mine. Its value lies not in the borders it draws but in the question it forces. Political belonging is not a law of nature fixed forever by the cartographers of 1815, and spaces that generate neither real sovereignty nor genuine loyalty have no claim to permanence simply because they happen to exist. Heinsohn noted, dryly, that his redrawn map was the conservative, earthbound option\u2014far more grounded than the libertarian dream of seasteading, of escaping onto artificial islands beyond the reach of any government at all. When the sober alternative is a recut continent, and the radical one is floating cities in international waters, you have a fair measure of how exhausted the inherited order has become.<\/p>\n<p>The usable core of all\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Clarify the meaning of &quot;this&quot;\">this<\/span>\u00a0is not the map, but the principle, and the principle is what I want to carry forward. Europe should no longer be conceived as a project of uniformity but as a system of differentiated political spaces. This is not a regression into petty-state fragmentation. It is the overdue recognition of European reality. The continent has always been most productive when it combined diversity with form\u2014when its political units stayed manageable, legitimate, and capable of acting, and broader cooperation happened only where it genuinely made sense. It grew weak whenever it manufactured institutions that produced neither real sovereignty nor genuine belonging.<\/p>\n<p>A new Europe would therefore\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Specify the disentangling process\">begin with a ruthless disentangling<\/span>. Everything that does not absolutely require continental regulation goes back to sovereign states\u2014not out of nostalgia, but out of reason. Border protection, major infrastructure corridors, selected security cooperation,\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Correct the hyphen\">raw-material<\/span>\u00a0and energy security, and certain trade questions: these may need joint coordination. But cultural policy, social policy, identity questions, vast stretches of economic and regulatory law, and above all the question of democratic self-government do not belong to a supranational apparatus. Wherever politics becomes existential, the decision must move back toward the people and the state.<\/p>\n<p>This is also where the deepest and most delicate point lies, the one that separates a serious continental order from a managed bloc. Europe can think as a continent only if it stops organizing itself around a permanent architecture of enemies. An order built primarily against Russia is, in the long run,\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use 'non-European' for brevity\">not a European order at all<\/span>;<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"gc-error\" title=\"Correct the capitalization\">it<\/span>\u00a0is the strategic extension of outside interests carried out on European soil. A viable continental order would have to\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Consider a more formal word\">find<\/span>\u00a0a way to include Russia rather than excommunicate it forever.<\/p>\n<p>This is not sentimental Russophilia, and it\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use direct acknowledgment\">is not a denial<\/span>\u00a0that real conflicts exist. It is the recognition of a basic fact of geopolitics: a continent that permanently writes its largest eastern power off the map turns itself into the forefield of others. Peace does not come from moral outrage. It comes from a durable order of power, interests, and space\u2014balanced security interests, limited spheres of influence, and reorganized economic interdependence.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Enhance clarity of geopolitical implications\">Whoever defines Russia out of Europe defines Europe as a geopolitically incomplete space, dependent for its security on decisions made elsewhere.<\/span>\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Use &quot;fails to&quot; for directness\">And a continent that will not defend, fund, or even<\/span>\u00a0define itself can hardly be surprised when its allies begin to ask why they should keep doing so on its behalf.<\/p>\n<p>And here Heinsohn\u2019s monetary intuition returns one last time. He imagined that even the names of currencies could keep a European feeling alive\u2014a Nordic crown, an Alpine franc, and an eastern and a western and a Mediterranean\u00a0<span class=\"gc-error gc-active\" title=\"Remove the comma\">euro, competing<\/span>\u00a0for international trust.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Enhance clarity of principle\">Strip away the specifics, and the principle is straightforward: competition disciplines money as it disciplines everything else.<\/span>\u00a0A single currency imposed on radically unequal economies is not a symbol of unity. It is a mechanism for converting other people\u2019s indiscipline into your own inflation.<\/p>\n<p>What follows from all\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Clarify the meaning of &quot;this&quot;\">this<\/span>\u00a0is a single European principle: cooperation without fusion. Proximity without centralism. Continentality without empire. Europe would\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Improve sentence structure\">no longer be a union of ideological conformity but a confederation of historic peoples and political spaces<\/span>\u2014able to breathe again because not everything would have to be forced to the same institutional, economic, and moral temperature. In place of harmonization at any price: the freedom to shape one\u2019s own order.\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Enhance clarity of integration concept\">In place of integration as an end in itself:<\/span>\u00a0cooperation grounded in shared interests. In place of a normative superstate: a Europe of different speeds, forms, and focal points.<\/p>\n<p>And that, precisely, is the only road to genuine European sovereignty. Europe will not become sovereign because Brussels accumulates more powers. It will become sovereign only when its states and peoples recover real political substance and form alliances on that basis. Sovereignty requires capabilities, not rhetoric\u2014industrial, military, technological, and cultural self-assertion. A Europe that obsesses over censorship and regulation at home while failing to secure its borders, its energy, and its strategic infrastructure abroad is not sovereign. It is a normative colossus\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Clarify metaphorical imagery\">on geopolitical clay feet<\/span>.<\/p>\n<p>This is where the mask of European moralism finally falls away. The Union speaks of democracy while narrowing the range of permissible opinion. It speaks of diversity while pursuing cultural conformity. It speaks of peace while manufacturing new lines of confrontation through ideological bloc logic. It speaks of openness while losing control of its borders. It speaks of resilience while making itself dependent. None of this is an accident. It is the logical result of a project that replaced political reality with normative self-staging.<\/p>\n<p>The alternative is not a naive nationalism but a European realism, a realism that understands that peoples do not vanish because elites\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Consider a more formal word\">find<\/span>\u00a0them embarrassing; that spaces do not lose their meaning because technocrats redefine them as functional zones; that history does not end because a bureaucracy tries to regulate it away; and that order endures only where freedom, belonging, and responsibility are brought back together.<\/p>\n<p>Europe therefore does not need a cosmetic correction of its institutions. It needs a change of political form: away from a morally charged administrative union and toward an order of the continent; away from abstract universal ideology and toward a concrete civilizational politics; and away from the permanent effort to define the European against the very conditions that made Europe possible. Europe must stop trying to emancipate itself from\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid redundancies\">its own<\/span>\u00a0inheritance and learn again to draw strength from it.<\/p>\n<p>Only then could today\u2019s zone of crisis become a historical space once more: a Europe no longer under the guardianship of\u00a0<span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid redundancies\">its own<\/span>\u00a0apparatus; a Europe that does not treat every internal difference as a threat or every external border as a moral failing; a Europe that takes itself seriously as a continent\u2014plural in its forms, clear in its borders, sober in its interests, and resolved to defend itself.<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"gc-recommendation\" title=\"Avoid overused expressions\">The time of the Union as we know it is running out.<\/span>\u00a0The only question is whether Europe will shape this transition itself\u2014or whether it will be torn apart by the contradictions of its own artificial construction and have its place in the world decided by others.<\/p>\n<p>The alternative is clearer than many care to admit:<\/p>\n<p>Either Europe becomes political again\u2014or it remains an apparatus until other powers decide its place in the world.<\/p>\n<p>* * *<\/p>\n<p><em>Frank-Christian Hansel is a member of the Berlin House of Representatives (Abgeordnetenhaus) for the Alternative f\u00fcr Deutschland (AfD), where he serves as his parliamentary group\u2019s spokesman on economic affairs, energy, and aviation. He writes regularly on European politics, metapolitics, and strategy.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>____<br \/>\n<a href=\"https:\/\/amgreatness.com\/2026\/06\/06\/europe-2-0-beyond-brussels-the-end-of-the-european-union-as-we-know-it\/\">https:\/\/amgreatness.com\/2026\/06\/06\/europe-2-0-beyond-brussels-the-end-of-the-european-union-as-we-know-it\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-67153","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67153","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=67153"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67153\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":67156,"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/67153\/revisions\/67156"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=67153"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=67153"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stateofthenation.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=67153"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}