The article “Obama’s ‘Where’s Waldo?’ Presidency”, by Ruth Marcus, features Marcus’s opinion of President Obama, which is generally negative. The article opens by discussing how “Barack Obama can be a strangely passive president.” (Marcus, paragraph 1) Examples of the president’s passiveness include him being “unwilling, reluctant or late to weigh in on the issue of the moment. “ (Marcus, paragraph 1) Marcus then recalls a few matters of Obama’s presidency, stating how she believes he dealt with the issues. Marcus’s opinions are found with ease, including the article’s ending sentence “No matter how hard you look, sometimes he’s impossible to find.”…
Hope is connotated as a positive thing that can influence how people think and act. People can also act as a beacon of hope too. In A Lesson Before Dying by Ernest J. Gaines, hope is a rare thing in their society. By characterizing Grant as a…
Republicans also cite what they have termed the “Biden Rule” when arguing that the seat not be filled. The “Biden Rule” stems from a speech that Vice President Joe Biden gave when he was a Senator and Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee (Lerner, Kira). Biden stated that if President H. W. Bush nominated an individual to replace a retiring justice that, "the Senate Judiciary Committee should seriously consider not scheduling confirmation hearings on the nomination until after the political campaign season is over." (Emery, C. 2016) Republicans, mainly Mitch McConnell point to this as evidence that nominations should not be considered during an election year. Mitch McConnell was quoted saying, "The Senate will continue to observe the Biden…
“(We have) more to do for the young woman in East St. Louis, and thousands more like her, who has the grades, has the drive, has the will, but doesn’t have the money to go to college (Obama, para 6).” Interestingly, he follows this statement with an attempt to dissatisfy one of the commonplace arguments against liberal policies. Mr. Obama says that these people do not ‘expect that government will solve all of their problems,’ but that they are willing to work hard in order to achieve their dreams. This seems to solidify Obama’s ethos with the audience, especially when combined with the specific scenarios that he uses to exemplify the need for his policies. The middle section of the speech is dedicated to the 2004 Presidential Election.…
In the beginning of the speech President Obama said, “My fellow citizens” (Jan, 2009). An emotional image was drawn in the citizen mind that the president has goals and aims in common. Goals and aims that helping to solve the current problems that most of the citizens had. Also, the president used through his speech we to connect himself the public and he stands as citizen like them. Moreover, President Obama proved how American citizens able to change and he provided an example of himself when he said “why a man whose father less than 60 years ago might not have been served in a local restaurant can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath” (2009).…
The first speech I read was FDR's speech to Congress; but then I decided to look it up and see if there was any type of video available there was. Being able to hear his voice and the way he spoke was I feel better than reading the actual speech because I was able to see the way he spoke was great. He was able to rally his fellow Americans together. FDR declaring war upon Japan was similar to Germanys because they were both declaring war on their so called "enemies". I feel that the tone of FDR's speech was positive even though the country was going through a hard time.…
In response to Assad gassing and killing children in Syria, President Barack Obama argues that something has to be done to stop Assad from using chemical weapons in his speech “Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on Syria.” He effectively builds his argument by using imagery, logos, and ethos. Obama starts his speech off by using vivid imagery of “(syrian) Men, women, children lying in rows, killed by poison gas. Others foaming at the mouth, gasping for breath. A father clutching his dead children, imploring them to get up and walk.”…
Throughout the longevity of the well leaded campaign by presidential candidate Barack Obama, all things seemed to be only headed in a positive direction for Obama in this moment of the election. However, running for presidency also includes the actions of family members and friends; but in the case Presidential candidate Obama’s pastor Reverend Wright. Reverend Jeremiah Wright, Pastor of Trinity United Church Of Christ criticized the U.S government by making remarks like It was America’s fault for 9/11”, and also stating that the government criticizes people of color. Presidential candidate Obama and his family going to this reverend's church at the time makes electing Obama as the potential president of America a potentially decision. Although…
Bush’s speech comforted the devastated nation by telling us acts of heroism and by telling us that we were going to get the men who did it. He wanted to comfort the nation because we were all affected by the tragedy of September 11th. He knew that we were confused about who did this and why anyone would ever do this. He comforted us by saying that the world was with us, supporting us and that we would never forget our nation’s national anthem playing at places such as Buckingham Palace, the streets of Paris and Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate. Knowing that the world’s prayers and support was with us reminded us that the entire world felt for us in the face of this tragedy.…
On November 4, 2008, we listen and saw the most iconic moment in history. Which was to hear Barack Obama's "Victory Speech" that took place in Grant Park, Chicago. This iconic speech took place in front of his supporters, voters, and family. Which Barack Obama was delivering because he had just been elected to become the president of the United States. It was more significant that Obama had succeed because he would be our 1st African American president that understood what it means to work from the bottom up till you reach your goals.…
Obamas speech was calculated and structured with many rhetorical strategies playing to his favor, so that his overall message was easily communicated, and both viewers and possible voters were able to understand and connect with his ideas. Two rhetorical strategies that seemed to aide his speech the most were the use of pathos and repetition. His reasoning for choosing these were probably due to the fact that this was his first speech as an official presidential candidate, and he wanted to be persuasive and precise on exactly what the forefront of his campaign was about and what he plans to do if elected. Where pathos appeals to ones emotion, it allows for a connection on a more personal level, which ultimately would further a greater sense of purpose or reason to get involved in what could be done. Obama said, “Beneath all the differences of race…
John Edwards calls on us to hope” he says. From then on, hope is in almost every sentence in the remaining section. The hope of the slaves who were victorious, the hope of immigrants seeking a better life in America, the hope of brave soldiers fighting for their country, the hope of children rising above expectations, and finally the hope of a small kid named Barack Obama, who would one day stand before the Democratic Convention, giving the keynote address. Obama then uses hope for the last time, saying “Hope—Hope in the face of difficulty. Hope in the face of uncertainty.…
I believe that President Barack Obama’s defining legacy is being able to maintain hope throughout any change, obstacle, or difficult time in one's life. Over the course of Barack Obama’s 8 years of Presidency, he has retained hope even when dealing with the doubts of many Americans and made the most difficult decisions of his life. I do consider his defining legacy of hope to be a positive step in American history, because it motivates people to never give up on what they want to see happen. The quote that I admired the most from his speech was when Mr. Obama said, “Yes we can. Yes we did.…
I am doing a discourse analysis of political speeches; I have chosen two political speeches, produced 45 years apart, in order to investigate the language surrounding racial equality and how it has changed over time. I collected my data from the internet as it is easily accessible, due to the fact that these speeches were spoken by public figures and televised. When finding my appendices I searched for speeches focused on racial equality, spoken by two different influential male figures with different upbringings and from different eras. When collecting my data I used the internet and the textbooks provided in the classroom; The speeches I am investigating were easy to access as they were originally spoken in front of a mass audience, along…
Part 1: Analysis of Barack Obama’s speech 2004 Keynote A1ddress The speech is written and spoken by Barack Obama in 2004. Back then he was a senator in Illinois, and this speech changed everyone’s point of view of him, and people started to see his presidential potential. About 9.1 million people were reported to have watched the Democratic convention on the night of the speech.…