By 1900, Carnegie's steel was cheap. Suddenly bridges and skyscrapers were not only possible but also affordable. Steel fed national growth, accelerating the already booming industrial area. Steel meant more jobs, national stature, and a higher quality of life for many. For Carnegie's workers, however, cheap steel meant lower wages, less job security, and the end of creative labor. Carnegie's drive for efficiency cost steel workers their unions and control over their own labor.…
In his speech to the people of the United States of America, president Kennedy uses repetition and offers solutions with a very imperative tone to convey his opinion that steel companies are causing harm by making their prices higher. He continues to argue that in a rising industry, they are the cause of jobs being lost, and that because of them, the country will be further in debt.…
President John F. Kennedy, in his news conference speech to the nation and steel company, appeals to a sense of community sacrifice and responsibility in an effort to establish his outrage of the rise in steel prices after the recession. Kennedy’s purpose is to address how action should be taken to provide the best interest of success for the United States. He adopts a sharp tone and includes very strong, clear diction which appeals to pathos on order to convey a sense of guilt or harshness that the steel companies are doing because of all the sacrifices the Americans have done.…
Kennedys angry tone allows the audience to believe that he wants something to be done about the price rise. Kennedys use of word choice engages the public into this idea that the steel industry did not really think about what raised prices would do to the economy. However, his use of repetition convinces the public that if the prices stay where they are not only will the economy be effected, so will they. Personally I think Kennedys speech was extremely effective because he gained the respect and trust of the American…
John F. Kennedy supported his argument against the increase in steel prices by providing pathos on the hard working Americans, and he explained the situation of the current steel production showing that there was no necessary reason to raise the price. No doubt he made the executives at the steel companies feel ashamed for there dull response to stimulating America’s economy out of “contempt for the interest of 185…
Kennedy’s use of logic is one of the many techniques that make his speech noteworthy. In Kennedy’s speech, he describes how people can improve life on Earth during the new era. John F. Kennedy uses many examples of logic to explain how the world can escape poverty. He understands that, “If a free society cannot help the many who are poor, it cannot save the few who are rich” (Kennedy online). He also acknowledges that people are much more powerful when they work as a team by saying, “Divided, there is little we can do -- for we dare not meet a powerful challenge at odds and split asunder” (Kennedy online). By using logic, Kennedy persuades people to make a change in the world. Kennedy’s exceptional use of logic makes his speech very effective.…
During the time period after the Civil War and nearing the twentieth century, America’s economy was in prime position to be molded – all America needed was someone to come along to mold it. Businesspersons like Cornelius Vanderbilt and entrepreneurs like John D. Rockefeller were prime examples of exactly whom America needed to take charge of the economy at this time; however, there was one man who was not only a self-made steel tycoon and one of the wealthiest 19th century U.S. businessmen, but a humanitarian as well. This charitable captain of industry was none other than Mr. Andrew Carnegie – who transformed himself from a young Scottish immigrant to a corporate leader and philanthropist whose name still echoes prominently throughout American society today. Although plagued by devastating events in his past, Andrew Carnegie was a captain of industry because of his smart investments and, ultimately, a philanthropist because of his selfless acts. Before owning the world’s largest steel corporation, Andrew Carnegie was a mere messenger boy for a telegraph office. It was at the telegraph office where Thomas A. Scott took a liking to Carnegie. After many years of working closely under Scott and moving up the ranks, Carnegie became superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad and Scott’s right hand man. Scott later gave Carnegie the task of connecting the East to the West by way of a bridge that crossed the Mississippi. On a hunt for a material that could withstand the rapid waters, Carnegie came across steel – a radically new substance that was more flexible than iron so it could handle the harsh tidewaters of the Mississippi. By the time the bridge was complete, Carnegie knew he had stumbled upon something. This new material could entirely revolutionize the building process. Carnegie may not have known the importance of what he discovered, but steel was about to become the center of Andrew Carnegie’s whole world and…
Kennedy used such a tone in the news conference so he could persuade the people to give in his words. His tone was persuasive and logical. For example, “ asking union members to hold down their wage requests, at a time when restraint and sacrifice are being asked of every citizen” which mean the president was trying to persuade the people to not ask for their pay since the country is going through rough times and he knew it was hard for the American people. Also, “If this rise in the cost of steel is imitated by the rest of the industry, instead of rescinded, it would increase the cost of homes, autos, appliances” and “It would increase the cost of machinery and tools to every American businessman and farmer.” He was trying to give examples as of what would’ve happened if all steel companies followed the minority in which were taking such actions. Last but not least, “It would add, Secretary McNamara informed me this morning, an estimated one billion dollars to the cost of our defenses, at a time when every dollar is needed for national security and other purposes.” As you can see this would’ve corrupt and bankrupt government because…
Throughout his speech in which he condemned companies for raising steel prices, Kennedy repeatedly appeals to a sense of communal sacrifice and collective responsibility in order to rally his everyman audience around this ostensible cause for outrage. From the beginning, Kennedy, a millionaire Harvard graduate, includes himself in the aggrieved camp of everyday Americans by using the first person “we”. The list of sacrifices being made by the “185 million Americans” are thus shared by him as well. He is on their side, united with them. Yet in the very same breath in which he lumps himself in with the rest of the country, he takes another privileged group – the “tiny handful of steel executives” – and sets them apart, separate. Such us-versus-them distinction is a critical justification for the contempt and righteous indignation that Kennedy heaps on the steel companies.…
John Fitzgerald Kennedy, arguably one of our greater presidents in our nation’s history, was assassinated on a Friday in the early stages of winter in 1963; however, he had accomplished much more than a man with lesser courage could have in his services to our country. One of President Kennedy’s most memorable actions while in office, actually took place very early on in his presidency; his Inaugural Speech in January of 1961. When attempting to motivate our citizens, Kennedy speaks of our citizens being “tempered by war,” and “proud of our ancient heritage,” he very successfully appeals to the emotions of his audience. Furthermore, his use of ethos quite effective when he speaks of sticking to the intentions and roles when compared to that of our forefathers, acknowledging the fact that we as a nation were built on the core principals provided by these men. The least successful, yet still powerful, statements were those concerning appeals to the logic, such as mentioning the downsides economically of the arms race, which at the time was the biggest fear of all Americans.…
In the excerpt from John F. Kennedy's inaugural speech, many rhetorical terms are used to broaden and strengthen the idea of the passage and open the minds of the Americans.Through The use of diction, the choice of words, and syntax, how words are arranged, these ideas are further conveyed and helped to develop the purpose of his speech. With the rhetorical terms hyperbole, inductive reasoning, point of view, epiphany, and balanced sentence, Kennedy's speech is further understood.…
Kennedy aspires to represent a glorious nation, but to obtain such status, Americans must ask themselves if they are capable to “forge against . . . enemies a grand and global alliance . . . that can assure a more fruitful life more mankind” (54). The use of cumulative sentences supplements Kennedy’s affirmative request for international unity as he adds rationale to support his vision at the beginning of the composed structure. His confident and assertive tone emphasizes his plea for action due to the fact that he shifts from passively questioning Americans’ ability to requesting Americans to join the historical movement. Kennedy asserts a cumulative sentence as he describes America’s history in letting “the word go forth from this time and place, to friend and foe alike, that the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans” whom are “proud … and unwilling to … permit the slow undoing of those human rights to which this nation has always been committed . . . at home and around the world” (52). To evoke optimism, Kennedy continues to state what America upholds as he genuinely expresses his patriotism. The well-turned syntax presented in Kennedy’s inaugural address is declamatory as he gracefully incorporates his mission in an arrangement made facile to…
"Steel and the Steel Industry." Encyclopedia of the United States in the Nineteenth Century. Ed. Paul Finkelman. New York: Charles Scribner 's Sons, 2001. Gale U.S. History In Context. Web. 25 Oct. 2012.…
President John F. Kennedy’s speech on April 10, 1962 regarding an increase in steel prices uses several rhetorical strategies such as repletion and imperative tone to persuade his audience that during this economic crisis, steel companies are raising steel prices which is irresponsible, unjustified and selfish on their part. President Kennedy also informs the middle class of America and steel industry executives who is his audience that the rising steel prices will create a further negative impact on economy and will negatively affect every American.…
The President of 1962 brings many things to light about the steel industry that can affect…