What the EU is and what it does
What the EU is and what it does
In essence, the EU is an informational archipelago, a network composed of separate, individual (peer) information platforms (islands), meaning its member states, which have been individualised and uniquely identified by it. The EU warrants that communication among the member states is seamless without any losing its individuality, despite being integrated into this new super-platform. Having formed the archipelago (i.e. the network having been established), system integration among the various individual information platforms that are its member states is what the EU actually does, while each member state continues to function as an information infrastructure for its citizens—that is, it continues to grant to each of them at birth a name and a citizenship, to issue regulation, to maintain a language or an official morality (religion), and so on.
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