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Address To The Nation Pardoning Richard Nixon Analysis

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President , Gerald R. Ford, in his speech, “Address to the Nation Pardoning Richard Nixon”, explains his reasoning behind pardoning Richard Nixon. Ford’s purpose is to demonstrate that pardoning Richard Nixon is the moral thing to do. He adopts a sentimental tone, academic diction, and establishes ethos in order to appeal to the minds of the American people. Ford establishes throughout his speech that pardoning Richard Nixon in the ethical thing to do by using a sentimental tone. The seemingly sentimental tone is adopted when talking about how the ordeal is “threatening [Richard Nixon’s] health as he tries to reshape his life, a great part of which was spent in the service of this country” (2). But, also when talking about how it could possibly take Richard Nixon years to “obtain a fair trial by jury in any jurisdiction of the United States” (2). The sentimental tone that Ford adopted made his audience feel sympathetic towards Nixon. Creating the effect that Nixon was an …show more content…
Ford begins right off developing his ethos by stating that “I have promised to uphold the Constitution, to do what is right as god gives me to see the right” (1). This establishes his ethos because not many people promise to uphold the Constitution. The Constitution is the law of our land and Ford was instilled with the power and privilege to uphold it. But also in “The facts, as I see them” (2) because Ford does not just blindly say his thoughts. He has thought and planned out what he is going to say. Additionally, showing America that he is capable of assessing the situation for what it is. He does not allow his “personal sympathy” (2), or “judgment as a lawyer”(2) to cloud his decisions. By stating that he was once a lawyer he establishes that he is capable of making important decisions while looking at all the facts without his emotions getting in the way, a quality that is expected of the

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