Reagan Inaugural Address Analysis

Words: 616
Pages: 3

Biting January winds blew at hundreds of listeners, a buzzing energy hovered in the air for this was the mark of the first Inaugural Ceremony to lack the Capitol’s East portico (porch). Facing the West Front, a symbolic direction manifesting success and opportunity, Regan begins his First Inaugural Address. President Reagan persuades the American people in his first inaugural address to act against the “economic ills” that fell upon the nation and to address the government supremacy through sound logic, significant use of syntax, and guilt-inducing emotion.
Logicality makes people feel safe. By understanding or following a person’s thought process we develop an inclination towards that party. Regan makes use of clear logic by questioning
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During Roosevelt’s administration, government had grown vastly, many during that time believe too much. As a solution to the economic instability and introduction to Reagan’s small government platform, Reagan clarifies what government should entail, convincing the American citizens that small government is best. Reagan speaks that his intention for government is to “work with us, not over us; to stand by our side, not ride on our back” (58-59). The use of multiple literary techniques to prompt the American citizens that “government has grown beyond the consent of the governed” (50-51) clarifies his sound logic with purposeful syntax convincing a nearby listener. In paragraph seven Regan uses a parallelism to hone in on the strength and patriotism that Americans possess, convincing all to heave the nation out of an economic deficit. Strategically, Regan uses repletion of “they will (…) go away” throughout lines 27-28 allowing the listener to process his diction and formulate their own opinion. Their opinion, however, is impressively shaped by Regan’s call to patriotism but only is as nearly effective due to his use strong use of powerful