"The only thing we have to fear is fear itself" is perhaps one of the most famous quotes of all time but it perfectly illustrates FDR's mindset. He believes that if the President, Congress, and the American people are too afraid to try anything new that could help fix the economy and move the country forward, then they will never make any progress. He then proceeds to mention some of the difficulties facing Americans during this time: increased taxes, farmers can no longer find markets for their produce, and the savings of many families are gone. Throughout his speech it seems that FDR places the blame of the current situation of the economy on "rulers of the exchange of mankind's goods" and "money chargers". This in reference to people
1. From the first 3 paragraphs of the speech, why did FDR feel the government
FDR believed in a “New Deal” America, containing social welfare and unemployment, Medicare, government involvement within the economy to help regulate and set standards. Both of these presidencies changed the fabric of American society by bringing the country as a whole through incredibly difficult issues, and showing how, with government intervention, the economy can be brought
FDR’s New Deal was effective because it involved the government in the economy more than it had ever done before. In his first inaugural address, FDR describes the problems that the America is facing. The value of products had shrunken, taxes had risen, and unemployment was alarmingly high (Doc A). FDR’s audience was the people of America, and he was speaking
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was elected as the 32nd president of the United States in 1932, the third year of the worst economic depression in America's history. At the height of The Great Depression about 25% of America's workforce was unemployed, and the country was crying out for change. This is what he promised in the inaugural address he gave on March 3, 1933: change. He gave his speech to show the hearts and minds of the people of the USA that they will come back from this great hardship. Franklin Delano Roosevelt used a powerful yet sympathetic tone of voice, dramatic pauses for emphasis, and plan to change how the country operated, in his Inaugural Address to reassure the nation that they will come back from the Great Depression.
FDR has impacted and changed American history. One of the many ways he impacted the course of history was how he led us through the Great Depression. The Great Depression first started in 1920s. When the stock market collapsed, it led to factories being shut down, shops closing because they were bankrupt, and unemployed workers gradually sank into the Great Depression. Factories laid off workers and the biggest companied began to collapse. An example of this is stated in Chapter Five, “By 1930, four million Americans who wanted work could not find it.”(Freedman, page 74). This shows how the stock market caused companies to be shut down because the stocks cost them all their money and people were becoming unemployed because of this. People began to lose all their money and homes which led them to camp out in empty lots, public parks, tents, etc. An example of this was shown in Chapter Five when it stated, “A growing population of the homeless poor camped out in empty lots and public parks, sleeping in tents, abandoned automobiles, and makeshift shanties.”(Freedman, page 74).
The businessmen and bankers were against Roosevelt's “New Deal program.” (Source B). “They feared his experiments, were appalled because he had taken the nation off the gold standard and allowed deficits in the budget, and dislike the concessions to labor.” (Source B). Mr. Roosevelt did not like being talked about like this so he responded with a new program of reform which was: Social Security, heavier taxes on the wealthy, new controls over banks and public utilities, and an enormous relief program for the unemployed. Yet another action taken by him to ensure that all the American people were satisfied. And in response to the people who still has fear in them Roosevelt says that “The only thing you have to fear is fear itself.” (Source
“Everyone is sympathetic to the cause of creating more jobs and better wages for labor:” (Doc B.) After the failure of President Hoover, people thought that FDR was going to fail as well. “It is a evolution, not a revolution, gentleman!” (Doc C.) This quote is especially important because the term revolution means some type of change, and the term evolution means slow and steady growth. FDR was slowly fixing problems, not trying to change the United States completely. “The authority of the federal government may not be pushed to such an extreme.”(Doc F.) The nation thought the government was trying to stick their nose into the business side of things too much. “Huge Corporations…have no right to transgress the law which gives to the workers the right of self-organization and collective bargaining.” (Doc G.) People were saying that huge corporations have no right to cross boundaries when it comes to how things should be run.
Language plays a crucial role in the development of power. Famous personalities in the United States use rhetorical devices to emphasize a specific point and make it clear to the audience. President Thomas Jefferson is a Democratic-Republican and won the election of 1800. In 1801 he presented his inauguration speech and was significant because it was the first time in the history when the power shifted from one party to the other. Martin Luther King, Jr. served as an American minister and played an active role in the civil rights movement. John F. Kennedy delivered his speech during his inauguration in order to develop relations with the Soviet Union and end Cold War. All the speeches were delivered by most known personalities and made use of rhetorical devices such as allusion and repetition to make their message memorable in the hearts of the citizens of America.
In 1908 President Theodore Roosevelt gave a speech on conservation. He invited the Supreme Court, his Cabinet, Senators and Representatives in Congress , and the Inland Waterway Commission. Theodore talks about his two main reasons on why they are there . His two main reasons on why they are there is because he wants to talk about morality and patriatsim.
The second term for President Franklin D. Roosevelt is very important for various reasons. One of them is that historically it was the first inauguration to be celebrated in January instead of March as previous presidential inaugurations. Secondary, this speech reminded people the New Deal intentions and accomplishments. Also, to underline the progress coming up and priorities in the second term of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Throughout his speech, Roosevelt states that economic instability caused by the Great Depression has led to a need for societal and economic reforms in the United States. This speech reflects Franklin D. Roosevelt’s political platform in the presidential election, which was based on the concept of the New Deal. He believed in using the government as a way to create liberal reforms and regulate the economic system in order to help the common people. Even today, Roosevelt’s speech is still upheld and read around the world as one of the greatest speeches made by a president in the 20th
When FDR was elected President in 1932, the United States was deep in the most severe economic depression the country had ever experienced: the Great Depression. The Great Depression had taken shape almost four years prior to FDR’s Inauguration with the crash of the stock market bubble in 1929. Following the stock market crash, companies began laying off workers due to a sudden drop in investment and consumer spending. This led to a vicious period of cyclical unemployment and the depression became even worse. Eventually, there were runs on the banks as people tried to guarantee the security of whatever savings they had left. This, too, only made things worse as banks were unprepared and thousands failed. The load that FDR faced entering the Presidency had not been lessened by his
President Lyndon B. Johnson delivered on the most famous and fascinating speeches in American history on March 15 1965. The speech was inspired over the situation that occurred in Selma, Alabama one week earlier. African Americans were protesting over voting rights, as due to manipulation of the voting system by whites. The purpose of President Johnson’s speech was to convince Congress and Americans to pass his bill on voting reformation. President Lyndon B. Johnson’s speech is rhetorically effective, by using strategies such as kairos, pathos, logos and ethos.
In his acceptance speech for his party’s nomination, President Roosevelt referred to the bankers, industrialists and big corporations of that time as ‘economic royalists’. He shared his concerns about how these financial and industrial institutions were becoming too powerful and were only acting in
The first inaugural address of Franklin D. Roosevelt was one that strove to lift the American people off their feet as the country entered some of it's worst years during the Great Depression. One of Roosevelt's strong advantages during his address was his ability to relate to the very real concerns of the everyday American citizens. With pressures of the failing economy facing the President-elect, he delivered this speech, addressing the nation about his plans for a New Deal. Roosevelt made his first point in his address by stating, “...the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” This statement later became one of the most famous Presidential lines in all of history. The purpose of this statement was to remind the nation that for this