...Obama Inaugural Address 20th January 2009 My fellow citizens: I stand here today humbled by the task before us, grateful for the trust you have bestowed, mindful of the sacrifices borne by our ancestors. I thank President Bush for his service to our nation, as well as the generosity and cooperation he has shown throughout this transition. Forty-four Americans have now taken the presidential oath. The words have been spoken during rising tides of prosperity and the still waters of peace. Yet, every so often the oath is taken amidst gathering clouds and raging storms. At these moments, America has carried on not simply because of the skill or vision of those in high office, but because We the People have remained faithful to the ideals of our forbearers, and true to our founding documents. So it has been. So it must be with this generation of Americans. That we are in the midst of crisis is now well understood. Our nation is at war, against a far-reaching network of violence and hatred. Our economy is badly weakened, a consequence of greed and irresponsibility on the part of some, but also our collective failure to make hard choices and prepare the nation for a new age. Homes have been lost; jobs shed; businesses shuttered. Our health care is too costly; our schools fail too many; and each day brings further evidence that the ways we use energy strengthen our adversaries and threaten our planet. These are the indicators of crisis, subject to data and statistics...
Words: 2408 - Pages: 10
...Inauguration Speeches are a custom that has existed since the very first inauguration featuring the United States first president, George Washington. During Washington’s second inauguration, after his re-election, Washington gave the shortest Inaugural address on record. This address was just 135 words. Nonetheless, every president since Washington has delivered an Inaugural address. The purpose of this address is for presidents to present their vision of the country (United States) and to set forth their goals for the nation. With that being said, this paper will use the strategy of genre analysis to critique to examine Barack Obama’s second Inaugural Address and John F. Kennedy’s inaugural speech. Genre analysis is a type of rhetorical analysis that examines speeches based on the artifacts or commonalities that contain. The artifacts of speech are created by the rhetor as a response to a specific exigency. So as Bitzer’s essay, The Rhetorical Situation, saw it, in order for a text to be rhetorical, it must come in response to a rhetorical situation. Furthermore a rhetorical situation has three characteristics, an audience, an existence of constraints, and as mentioned above, an exigency. One manner, in which we can analyze an artifact, is through...
Words: 1448 - Pages: 6
...Weeman January 24, 2013 Inaugural Address Analysis On January 21, 2013, President Obama gave his inaugural speech. By giving an inaugural speech, this means that the president will bear witness to the enduring strength of the constitution and affirm the promise of the democracy. In the beginning of his speech, he stated the vows he has agreed to make as a country together. He says, “Together, we discover that a free market only thrives when there are rules to ensure competition and fair play. Together, we resolve that a great nation must care for the vulnerable and protect its people from life’s worst hazards and misfortunes.” As the speech goes on, he explains that when times change we, the people, must do the same. We must come together as one nation and one people. He talks about the middle class- how America’s “prosperity” must rest upon their broad shoulders. He believes that every citizen deserves the same amount of security and dignity; therefore, he decided to reduce the cost of health care. He will maintain our economic vitality and our national treasure by not allowing other nations have the technology that will power new jobs and industries, but by claiming its promise. He wants to defend our people through strength of arms and rule of law; resolve issues with other nations peacefully. He ends his speech by saying that by being a citizen we, the people, have to set the course; by votes we cast and voices we lift. The last line of his speech is very powerful and states...
Words: 989 - Pages: 4
...There are a multitude of speeches that have had significant impacts on the course of history. Some of these speeches have not only shaped the United States of America, but also other countries around the globe. Barack Obama, 44th president of the United States, and Nelson Mandela, first president of South Africa, have been noted for particularly noteworthy inaugural speeches. They both use similar styles of rhetoric, such as use of repetition and allusion. The election of Barack Obama in 2008 marked a turning point in American history. With the election of the first black president, it was a signal America was moving in the right direction towards equality and away from racial prejudices of the past. As a result of his election, American people...
Words: 1050 - Pages: 5
...Former 44th President, Barack Obama, in his powerful speech, The 2009 “Inaugural Address”, to call to action that we need to fix the National Economic Crisis. Obama’s purpose is to give insight about what he was going to do for the United States of America, he was explaining all the plans he had. He adopts an informative tone in order to get Americans to work together and fix our problems. There are three main rhetorical devices he used, and those are as listed: consonance, allusion and metaphor. All of which helped persuade his audience. Obama begins his speech by bringing light that he is with the country, not against, all he plans to do is help. He appeals to the emotions of the audience by saying that “We the people declare today that the...
Words: 366 - Pages: 2
...James Poulos Summary James Poulos believed President Trump’s inaugural address was excellent. Donald Trump modified previous president’s speeches for his address. A main theme of Trump’s speech was the “America First” policy. The President explained the policy is a necessity not an idea of greed or pride. Poulos believed that Trump addressed the nation without mentioning bargainers and “the art of the deal”. The author mentioned how America turned against commerce as a source of unity. The article mentions Tocqueville’s analysis of Americans. Tocqueville observed that American’s were prideful when executing commerce. He also said our nation almost became fixed on commercialism, because trump was elected that thought changed. Trump believed...
Words: 693 - Pages: 3
...event to mark the beginning of the new President’s four-year term. The most recent one happened Friday, January 20th, 2017. Donald J. Trump. Barack Obama was replaced. The Inauguration is a peaceful transition of the presidential power. Donald Trumps’s Inauguration was the forty-fifth inauguration in American history. Many people didn’t want it to happen, but obviously it did because a lot more people want Donald Trump as President than the others presidential candidates like Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Ben Carson, etc, etc. The Inauguration began when Donald Trump and his wife Melania attend service at St. John’s Church at 8:30 am. An hour and ten minutes later Barack Obama and his wife Michelle welcome the Trumps to the White House. Five minutes later they all have coffee and tea. At 10:30 am, The Trumps, and the Obamas leave for the Capitol....
Words: 986 - Pages: 4
...into the lives of many blacks around the world or the death of John F Kennedy that change America forever and the death of Emmett Till August of 1955. The two person who should be compare is Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela for being elected the first black male president, their humble heart to bring justice against many minorities around the country and the desire each leader had to help a growing nation of people base on the Inaugural speeches given by Barack and Nelson. Barack Obama and Nelson Mandela are the most iconic political figure of our time both man had a strong vision and a purpose and overcoming so many obstacles in life. While both leader achieved high values when elected first black president for each of their country both serve with honors and high self-confidences and was great respected for their courage’s and wisdoms of being elected the first black president for their country all over the world. The two were reasonable to come to agree and to realize that the only way to make their counties wealthier or well off, for all the...
Words: 490 - Pages: 2
...2.2.2 JFK Inaugural Address If anyone ever tells you that speeches don't make a difference, point them at JFK's Inaugural Address. After winning the Presidential election by one of the smallest margins in history, he received a 75% approval rating from the American public the following day, something most of today's politicians would kill for. The fact that so much of it is still remembered today is an indication of just how powerful his words were. People still debate today who wrote most of the speech - President Kennedy himself or his speechwriter Ted Sorensen - so perhaps we should just agree to look at it as a team effort. Unlike (say) President Obama's recent 2nd Inaugural, JFK's Inaugural was aimed not only at the people of American but the people of the world. It was, after all, delivered at the height of the Cold War (the Cuban Missile Crisis happened only 20 months later). If you read it in full you are immediately struck by how international in character and globally focused it is. Using a rhetorical device called anaphora, in successive paragraphs he directs his words as seen in these examples “To those old allies whose cultural and spiritual origins we share,” ”To those new states whom we welcome to the ranks of the free,” “To those people in the huts and villages of half the globe “ “To our sister republics south of our border,” “To that world assembly of sovereign states, the United Nations,” Finally, to those nations who would make themselves our adversary”...
Words: 518 - Pages: 3
...managed to come out on top, learn from our mistakes, and advance ourselves toward the greater good of all. Since its founding, America has grown as a whole. We have fought to eliminate injustices while promoting integrity, courage and greatness. The right of freedom of speech granted to us by our founding fathers ensures that if there are injustices being committed that the American people will find out about them and we will be courageous enough to stand up and face the oppressors. We are a country that fights for what we believe in. The belief in the American Dream has always been the vision of this country. A belief that everyone is created equal. Regardless of race, religion, gender, or social status, every man and woman should have access to the same education and opportunities for advancement. Every citizen of this country should be granted the same freedoms. We have always been a melting pot of different religions, races, and cultures all with different ideas. One of our foundational beliefs is that we all have the same opportunities. In his inauguration speech Barack Obama said, “Our success depends on honesty and hard work, courage and fair play, tolerance and curiosity, loyalty and patriotism.” (Obama). The reward of hard work and dedication is the opportunity to be self-made, to rise to any social class that you desire, and have the ability to achieve anything you set your mind to. Our entrepreneurial ingenuity has made us leaders in technology, science, and most...
Words: 1461 - Pages: 6
...On January 20th, 2009 President Barack Obama made an inaugural speech in front of millions of people all over the world. His purpose was to inform others that he would help change the world if others would too. In order to make his vision stick in the minds of his audience, Obama speaks about the country's past history, and how we should join together as a country. Obama uses rhetoric to present his message of creating hope and change together in America while fixing the economic and social issues that we had at the time. Throughout his speech, he uses anaphora, allusion, and reputation to appeal to have a better connection with his audience. Obama uses allusion throughout his speech to reference past presidents and events. The speech begins...
Words: 460 - Pages: 2
...President-elect Barack Obama, in his 2009 inaugural address, discusses the issues with healthcare, government corruption and much more. Obama's purpose is to show that even though the nation is at its worst, there is still hope beyond the fear. To do this he uses: either or thinking, pathos and the plain-folk aspect. Obama uses either/or thinking in order to instill fear into the audience. He appeals to this sense of fear by implying that ¨Either we make this change or America will be no more.¨ and that ¨ We remain a young nation. But in the words of Scripture, the time has come to set aside childish things. The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit; to choose our better history to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea passed on from generation to generation¨ (4-6) He carries this burden with us and he will never give up on the people under him, for they need the most reassuring. Obama continues by using pathos. He brings the nation's ancestors into his speech by stating: ¨For us, they packed up their few worldly possessions and traveled across oceans in search of a new life.(7) For us, they toiled in sweatshops, and settled the West, endured the lash of the whip, and plowed the hard earth. For us, they fought and died in places like Concord and Gettysburg, Normandy and...
Words: 430 - Pages: 2
...POTUS" Introduction Barrack Obama became the 44th President of the United States of America on January 20th, 2009. He is the first African American to take office and with his presidency he promised to make changes to America that would liberate the American people from crisis into a bright new beginning. In his Inauguration speech, he claimed to mend the financial crisis by stimulating jobs and laying a “new foundation for growth” (Naughton, “Inauguration speech”). He promised to rebuild the Nation’s foundations such as roads, bridges, electric grids, and digital lines, to revive the prosperity and importance of science, to increase the care and lower the cost of health care, to mend the threat of global warming, to enact peace with Afghanistan, to withdraw from Iraq, and to transform the educational system to meet the conditions of a new era (Naughton, “Inauguration speech”). Throughout his first year as president Obama has enacted many policies and regulations such as the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, Recovery and Reinvestment Act, and Health Care Bill. However, has Obama stayed true to his original promises stated throughout his campaigns, in his Inauguration speech, as well as his first State of Union speech. Has Obamba’s first year been a success or a failure? This essay will explore the history of Obama’s ascend to presidency, his success and failures, and an overall evaluation of Obama’s first year in office. The Rise of Barrack Obama Obama was born on August 4, 1961...
Words: 4009 - Pages: 17
...One of the most important social problems faced by any person is unemployment. Unemployment may lead to loss of self-esteem, depression, and chronic worry about how to provide for dependents. Underemployment is when a person is either not actually out of a job, but due to need for money, has taken a job which does not allow him (her) to take care of the people and housing as it was done before. It also may include joblessness when people give up on looking for a job. Both situations can be stressful and lead to serious emotional and physical illness. It is not only the loss of income… but also represents loss of control over what may happen in the future to their home and family. A parent no longer able to supply children with what they and most of their friends have had in the past may develop a sense of failure or shame. Unemployment (also underemployment) is a serious social problem, especially since most of those experiencing unemployment are dealing with something that was lost through no fault of their own and reversal of it is also out of their control. The amount of people unemployed is expressed as a percent of the total work force, and has been regarded as a marker for how the economy is doing in general. Calculation of the rate of REAL UNEMPLOYMENT (the unemployed and the underemployed and those who have given up) is actually much higher. While there is no agreement on any one cause of the great depression of 1929, it is generally noted the final blow to the economy...
Words: 1028 - Pages: 5
...“Here in America, we don’t give in to our fears. We don’t build up walls to keep people out.” (Obama). These words of Michelle Obama, recent first lady of the United States, interprets that we do not let things come between us, because we do not build block pathways for people to be kept out. Michelle Obama mainly focuses her attention in social works and poverty, which had lead her into the path of wanting to be a lawyer. She has accomplished so much more, she is being relied on for children in America to have better education and live freely. In other words, current issues that have occurred in today’s society is the education-wise, equality rights, and relying on oneself, by standing in all of sticking to one stance. Although, Donald Trump...
Words: 1388 - Pages: 6