Roosevelt was able to use his meticulous diction that described his empathetic tone to persuade the citizens that he had a logical plan to bring the nation out of the Great Depression. His appeal to pathos, ethos, and logos with use of figurative language helped convince the audience about his agenda. His appeal to pathos could be seen throughout the speech, as he continuously referred to the nation as “our nation,” “our problems,” “our national security,” “our government,” and more. His repetition of the word “our” was used 29 times in his speech, which helped emphasize that even he was part of the problem, that the Americans citizens were not alone, FDR was one of them. This close connection with the audience in addition to his appeal to ethos would help him win their trust. In his speech, he gives credits to many different laws, like the Farm Relief bill, Railroad Bill, and also local governments, like the government in Muscle Shoals. His ability of giving credit to those laws, governments, the congress, and the legislation makes his sound scholarly who has background information on the nation. He also addressed to President Washington and President Teddy Roosevelt, as well as the constitutional government, to demonstrate that his hopes for the future will never die out. He quotes those people to make the citizens realize that the US has been independent and successful for hundreds of years, and a stock market crash will not change that. His use of metaphors for addressing the stock market crash is a way to not show the citizens the past, but what lies for them in the future. He also uses idioms, like “kill one bird with two stones” to refer how the government if show the money crisis issue and unemployment at the same time. This created hopes within the citizens that something good is there for them in the future. Furthermore, FDR does not often appeal to logos because he knows that he is tells statistics, knowing that more than half of his
Roosevelt was able to use his meticulous diction that described his empathetic tone to persuade the citizens that he had a logical plan to bring the nation out of the Great Depression. His appeal to pathos, ethos, and logos with use of figurative language helped convince the audience about his agenda. His appeal to pathos could be seen throughout the speech, as he continuously referred to the nation as “our nation,” “our problems,” “our national security,” “our government,” and more. His repetition of the word “our” was used 29 times in his speech, which helped emphasize that even he was part of the problem, that the Americans citizens were not alone, FDR was one of them. This close connection with the audience in addition to his appeal to ethos would help him win their trust. In his speech, he gives credits to many different laws, like the Farm Relief bill, Railroad Bill, and also local governments, like the government in Muscle Shoals. His ability of giving credit to those laws, governments, the congress, and the legislation makes his sound scholarly who has background information on the nation. He also addressed to President Washington and President Teddy Roosevelt, as well as the constitutional government, to demonstrate that his hopes for the future will never die out. He quotes those people to make the citizens realize that the US has been independent and successful for hundreds of years, and a stock market crash will not change that. His use of metaphors for addressing the stock market crash is a way to not show the citizens the past, but what lies for them in the future. He also uses idioms, like “kill one bird with two stones” to refer how the government if show the money crisis issue and unemployment at the same time. This created hopes within the citizens that something good is there for them in the future. Furthermore, FDR does not often appeal to logos because he knows that he is tells statistics, knowing that more than half of his