Preserving A Liberal Society Requires Better Public Discourse: A Conversation with Berny Belvedere

Aaron Ross Powell: Welcome to Zooming In from The UnPopulist. I’m Aaron Ross Powell. Joining me today is Berny Belvedere, the new senior editor at The UnPopulist. We’re going to chat today about the state of politics and the defense of liberalism.

A transcript of today’s podcast appears below. It has been edited for flow and clarity.

Aaron Ross Powell: Berny, let’s maybe start with a bit about you.

Berny Belvedere: Thanks, Aaron, for having me on. I’m really stoked to be here. So, I was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which, just a funny thing about that: the literal translation of Buenos Aires is something like good air. But really, I think, the key idea that that name tries to get across is something like friendly skies. It’s the capital of Argentina. I didn’t get a chance to know it too well—we left when I was four and a half, five-ish. We had an opportunity to become citizens really quickly here in the United States, so my parents took that opportunity and we went from Buenos Aires to Kansas City, Kansas, on the Kansas side of things. We’re one of the few on the Kansas side of the divide. Then, for my high school years, we moved to Miami, Florida.

So those are the places where I’ve lived. It’s an interesting mix of different types of arrangements and social configurations, but it’s also colored my approach to the kinds of places that I feel like society can build well. I’ve taken my love for suburban America from Kansas City. Miami is an international metropolis, very big on sprawl in a way that I don’t quite prefer as much. I like a more densely concentrated type of city. Buenos Aires is just sort of European in its flavor, but also combining South American aspects as well.

Those are the places I’ve lived. Intellectually, I’ve pursued both theology and philosophy at a pretty high level. I didn’t get a PhD, but I went for graduate degrees in philosophy and in theology. In the past, I guess if we were in medieval times, it would have just been one field of study, but with the specialization of knowledge, it forced me to get a degree in each. Even the theology that I did was very philosophical in nature. I guess that [philosophy] would be my overriding interest. That’s a little bit about my background.

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