In Robert Kennedy’s speech on the death of Martin Luther, Kennedy uses ethos and pathos to convince the audience that the death of Martin Luther King Jr. is not something that should cause hate and violence. Instead, Kennedy tries to convince them that King’s death should be used as something to unite the people. Kennedy uses ethos when he informs the audience that he had experienced similar feelings when his brother, John Kennedy, was also killed by a white man. This shows the audience that he knows what they are feeling and that he genuinely feels sad about Martin’s death. He also uses ethos when tells the audience that he is “filled with hatred and mistrust of the injustice of such an act”.
President Lyndon B. Johnson was our 36th president after the beloved John F. Kennedy. He had to pick up the reigns after John F. Kennedy and wanted to show he could be just as good, if not better, of a president as Kennedy or event the 2 presidents before kennedy. His use of rhetoric tries to include the entire country toward one solution. He addresses domestic policy, but instead calls it “justice”.
On an important day in 1961, John F. Kennedy delivered a speech to the people all over the US and around the world that still gets quoted today. He made this speech to unite and make everyone come together. In his speech he used various examples of ethos, pathos and logos that really helped the speech and people come together. He as president would write the speeches himself and wouldn’t let others write it for him and is praised by many people because of that. John F. Kennedy didn’t use a lot of ethos but the ones he used were very good because it got the point across clearly.
Everyday , the careless choices made by higher powers affect the lives of their subordinates. In a conference held by John F Kennedy in 1962, this United States President argued that the US steel companies hiking prices was unfair and unnecessary when the United States condition, and the economic condition of steel companies were juxtaposed. Commencing with harsh accusations, Kennedy uses logos and pathos to condemn steel companies for victimizing the public. Kennedy begins his speech by utilizing blunt accusations, repetition, and appealing to a sense of sacrifice and consequence. Kennedy shames these corporations for hiking up prices when the national economy is focused on rebuilding itself.
Joshua Dolan Mrs. Meszaros AP Language 11:8 21 September 2023 Steel President John F. Kennedy, who is known for advocating for stable prices and wages, passionately remarks that the raising of the steel prices is unfair at the news conference on April 11, 1962. Kennedy starts off in a very informal tone, while using pathos to talk about how unfair the steel prices are to the American people. He uses logos to deduct why the prices of steel are so unfair and are causing damage to American homes. Kennedy wants the people to rise up against the steel prices in order to convince leading steel corporations to lower their prices. People love Kennedy and they trust his leadership, which will help a lot as he is trying to pursue them.
In order to have a compelling speech, one must utilize the use of pathos, ethos, and logos. In his second inaugural address, Obama uses all three of these in a very effective way considering his situation. Being his second term in office it would be unnecessary to rely on the use of ethos or logos, considering they already know his plan for office and his credibility level. Obama’s heavy dependence on pathos seems like an intelligent choice. Although, Obama did not completely remove the use of ethos and logos.
After a narrow win, President Kennedy takes the stage and presents the goals for his presidency in his inaugural address on January 20, 1961. Americans and audiences around the world listen as Kennedy inspires people to move past a difficult time in history and work together to create a better country. He begins with juxtaposition, in which Kennedy contrasts “an end, as well as a beginning.” The end symbolizes an end to past adversity, and the beginning symbolic of moving on to start fresh.
How does a president convey to the Americans the severity of an economic distress? How does he prove to the Americans that what he proposes is the correct resolution? It all depends upon the argument the president presents to the American people, whether it addresses a solution or not. On April 10, 1962, President John F. Kennedy speaks to the American people, addressing and calling out the injustices of the rapid inflation of steel prices and his call for a national sacrifice for stable prices and wages with the use of ethos (credibility), pathos (emotional connection), and logos (logical facts). Kennedy’s point of reprimanding the steel companies is achieved through his use of pathos, or drawing in the audience with an emotional connection.
Kennedy uses logos in order to appeal to bring sequence to his speech. Every decision that gets made can and will affect the course of the future, whether that be a good thing or a bad thing. Now more than ever, we need to have a plan of defense. We could have easily declared war on a certain country…but that would not solve the problem. Instead, it would cause more.
In his speech Kennedy uses different rhetorical devices to unify the citizens of both the United States and the world. Kennedy was giving this speech after winning by a very small margin of votes so he was trying to unite the people of the United States and show he was the correct choice for the president. This speech was given during the Cold War so he was trying to connect the people around the whole world and establish peace. Kennedy was able to unify the people and try to establish peace while at the same time making himself seem like a very competent leader. In his speech Kennedy tries to build his credibility as a personable leader by creating ethos.
Perhaps the saddest thing that can ever happen to any friendship is to acknowledge a friend’s death. However, in 1968, when the death of Martin Luther King shocks the world, Robert Kennedy has to quickly control his hopelessness of losing a close friend and release the depressing news of a freedom fighter’s fall. In a chaotic time with intense racism and unstable society, Robert Kennedy’s speech successfully pacifies the world and reduces the possible conflicts with his deliberate use of a powerful speech that unified the world and at the same time remember Martin Luther King’s achievement. In Remarks on the Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert Kennedy effectively uses ethos, pathos, and parallelism to create strong bonds of unity as Americans and encourage
John F. Kennedy discusses and analyzes on how the nation differs from the past and present day in that time period. Kennedy narrators on the division and war in the the world to appeal to the audience patriotism by using pathos and logos. In this speech President Kennedy states “to thoses who would make themselves our adversary, we offer not a pledge but a request; that both sides begin the quest for peace, before the dark power of destruction unleashed.” He uses this quote to obtain a logical appeal to the appeal to the people. Kennedy uses logos to show that he wants the nation to come together and be humble together in one peace.
His diction is very inclusive; he commences his speech with several uses of the words ‘we’ and ‘our’, which makes way for inclusivity. JFK is blurring the distinction between citizen and superior governor by including the people in his proclamation. While describing the hardships and challenges that the country is facing, Kennedy mentions how imperative the occasion is on a global level; in the midst of the Cold War, he reminds his audience of the importance of uniting. Through the use of the lexical field of danger — words such as: ‘defiance’, ‘serious’, ‘risk’, and ‘sacrifice’ — he creates a feeling of tension and urgency, and engages his audience to the concern. To conclude his speech, the President mentions self-guilt on the part of the country on how they had not displayed the “sense of business responsibility” that they should have, a rhetorical strategy that approximates the audience to the government.
Franklin Roosevelt uses pathos, ethos and logos all throughout his speech. “December 7th 1941- A date that will live in infamy.” This quote will forever be in the minds of Americans. The bombing of the Pearl Harbor is an event no one can forget and neither is Franklin Roosevelt’s speech. It was this that brought American into World War Two and changed history.
The two sentences from his Berlin speech summed up the charisma Kennedy carried. These two sentences are collective rhetorical and emotive masterpieces. The comparison of one city, Berlin, to the Roman Empire of old encapsulates the power and emotions he wanted to instill in the people of Berlin. “Ich bin ein Berliner” was something to be proud of, something to be boastful of (even if a Berliner meant ‘jelly doughnut’ to all the German people outside Berlin).