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THE PAUL BIALLY POD

THE PAUL BIALLY POD

著者: Paul Bially
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Politics and culture with emphasis on science, business, and individual freedom. Paul Bially candidly confronts the superficial nonsense and special interests destroying our reality to offer a deeper take on critical issues and themes impacting the South Jersey electorate. Paul is a progressive conservative, Teddy Roosevelt pragmatist on a mission to rebuild our politics from the grassroots, one conversation and one fireside speech at a time. New episodes released Sundays at 8PM EDT.

© 2025 THE PAUL BIALLY POD
政治・政府 政治学
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  • Bull Moose Values: Balancing Tradition with Progress
    2025/05/05

    Paul returns this week with fresh resolve and a clear mission: to revive the spirit of Theodore Roosevelt for today’s conservative movement. In this episode, he explores what it means to be a Bull Moose conservative — someone who honors tradition while advancing bold reforms rooted in common-sense values.

    Highlights:

    • The moment that reignited Paul’s commitment to Roosevelt-style leadership
    • Why TR’s legacy still resonates with everyday Americans
    • 10 Bull Moose values unpacked: grit, integrity, and forward-looking conservatism
    • How Paul’s brand of populism challenges entrenched elites without abandoning principle
    • A message to listeners: real leadership means respecting the past while building the future

    Connect with Paul:

    • Website: www.ThePaulBiallyPod.com
    • Email: Producer@ThePaulBiallyPod.com
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    21 分
  • Reflections of a Five-Month Councilman (Spotlight on Ben Franklin)
    2025/04/14

    In this personal and thought-provoking episode, Paul reflects on his brief but impactful five-month tenure as an appointed Councilman—an experience that ended with a narrow election loss but sparked a powerful moment of clarity and inspiration.

    Pouring a glass of wine after a long campaign, Paul found himself staring at a bottle bearing the image of Ben Franklin. What followed was more than just a quiet evening—it was a meditation on public service, legacy, and the role of the "Renaissance thinker" in local government.

    Key Themes:

    • The Renaissance Mindset: Why local politics needs generalists—citizens with broad life experience and curiosity who think across disciplines.
    • Leadership Lessons from the Greats: From Ben Franklin to Teddy Roosevelt and Condoleezza Rice, Paul shares what timeless leadership looks like and why it transcends labels.
    • Grit After Loss: How defeat at the ballot box led to deeper clarity about purpose, public service, and the need for a new political ethos.
    • The Call for Better Civic Engagement: Why real progress demands humility, listening, and a willingness to serve with your whole self, not just a partisan identity.

    Paul’s Core Message:

    “Local politics doesn’t need more personality politicians—it needs problem solvers. It needs modern Renaissance men and women.”

    Whether you’ve run for office, thought about it, or simply want to see your community thrive, this episode will challenge you to reconsider what it means to lead—and who’s qualified to do it.


    Connect with Paul:

    • Website: www.ThePaulBiallyPod.com
    • Email: Producer@ThePaulBiallyPod.com
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    12 分
  • The Small Town Marketplace of Ideas
    2025/04/07

    Paul’s been on the road this week, meeting with innovators, farmers, entrepreneurs, and everyday folks who are building real things, solving real problems, and thinking for themselves.

    He recently visited UC Davis and the Mondavi Institute in California—places where science, agriculture, and innovation come together in powerful ways. That trip reminded him just how much energy and ingenuity can thrive when people are free to challenge assumptions and ask better questions.

    Back home, he’s asking a tough question:
    Why is it so hard to find that same spirit in state and local politics?

    In this episode, Paul lays out a bold case for revisiting the concept of the marketplace of ideas framed by John Milton, John Stuart Mill, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and others---not the kind of marketplace dominated by buzzwords and talking points, but one where people actually listen, debate, disagree, and grow stronger through the process.

    He talks about:

    • Why we need more truth-tellers and fewer box-checkers
    • How science and business welcome challenge—but politics runs from it
    • What it means to earn trust, not just perform for it
    • And how small towns like ours can lead with courage, not conformity

    This episode is a call to action for thinkers, makers, and doers—people who want more than just safe answers and status quo politics.

    The same spirit that drives innovation should drive our civic life.

    It’s time for real talk, real debate, and real leadership.

    Notable and Quotable:

    “The Marketplace of Ideas” is not a new concept. It has been presented by John Milton, John Stuart Mill, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. and others and has become commonplace. However, feel free to research their works to understand the original context.

    Milton, John. Areopagitica: A Speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing to the Parliament of England. 1644.

    Mill, John Stuart. On Liberty. London: John W. Parker and Son, 1859.

    Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. Dissenting opinion in Abrams v. United States, 250 U.S. 616 (1919).

    The quote "do what you can, with what you have, where you are" is often attributed to Teddy Roosevelt. Roosevelt gives credit for this quote to Squire Bill Widener with the original words being "do what you can, with what you've got, where you are."

    Connect with Paul:

    • Website: www.ThePaulBiallyPod.com
    • Email: Producer@ThePaulBiallyPod.com
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    14 分

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