In both Germany and Britain, democracy still exists in form — but increasingly less in substance. As politics becomes more managerial and moralised, public trust erodes and genuine debate narrows. This essay reflects on Friedrich Merz and Keir Starmer as figures of a wider transformation: the quiet shift from democratic participation to administered consent, and the growing danger of a society in which freedom survives only in name.
In Deutschland wie in Großbritannien existiert Demokratie weiterhin in ihrer äußeren Form – doch ihr innerer Gehalt erodiert zunehmend. Während Politik immer stärker verwaltet und moralisch aufgeladen wird, schwindet das Vertrauen der Bürger, und der Raum für echte Auseinandersetzung verengt sich. Der Essay betrachtet Friedrich Merz und Keir Starmer als Ausdruck dieser Entwicklung und fragt, was geschieht, wenn Demokratie mehr verwaltet als gelebt wird.
A historical reflection on how Christianity once shaped a unified Mediterranean world, how Islam transformed the East, and how centuries of tension reshaped Europe. The article argues for a renewed moral centre today—not doctrinal, but rooted in mutual respect and the ethical core of Jesus’ teaching.
A reflection on how Europe might rediscover a shared moral centre without enforcing religious uniformity. Using Jesus’ ethic as one integrative voice among many, this piece explores innate moral capacities, cultural modelling, and the creative–destructive axis at the heart of human behaviour. Includes scientific notes and two asides on moral development and plural ethics.
From Schiller and Beethoven to the EU project, and from Steinmeier to the AfD, this essay explores how Germany’s cultural idealism once shaped Europe — and how today’s political tensions threaten the unity symbolised by the “Ode to Joy.” Dialogue, not exclusion, is the test of democratic confidence.
After 1945, Europe rebuilt not only its cities but also its conscience. What began in Germany as a reckoning with absolute evil became a continental project — the attempt to redeem civilisation through democracy, human rights, and reason. This essay traces that moral arc from guilt to responsibility, from rebellion to fatigue, and from faith in redemption to the disillusionment of the present.
In Bochum-Wattenscheid, the election of an AfD deputy mayor has triggered outrage, suspicion, and calls for his removal — a local drama that mirrors Europe’s wider fear of populism. This essay explores how inherited guilt, moral panic, and the urge to “defend democracy” can end up undermining it, turning freedom into ritual self-policing.
Across Europe, the act of knowing the citizen has become a test of power.
These three essays trace how identity moved from the census to the classroom, from the passport to the algorithm. Germany counts precisely; Britain hesitates to count at all. Yet both reveal the same unease — that the more the state tries to know its people, the more it risks losing their trust. Counting Strangers, The British Fear of Being Known, and From Card to Code follow that uneasy journey from bureaucratic record to digital surveillance, asking what remains of freedom when knowledge itself becomes a form of control.


