Originally posted by EyesWithPrideB3:[..]
I agree with you, there really wasn't a problem with him misusing the language in terms of getting his point across- but there's plenty to be argued in the subject of rhetorical devices/practices like the theory of identification where the misuse fails to connect the dots. Kennedy tried to use the language to identify with the crowd, and my argument was that its' misuse failed to do so- sure, they identified with him because he supported their beliefs, but no further due to his use of the language. It may have been understood and welcomed, but it didn't establish a common ground between the two parties in question on its own.
Good points and you can't really...if you get something wrong, don't expect a crowd to connect with you on those grounds. They can support what you think, but they don't have to, if it's wrong, go with it entirely.
Essentially, it's the wrong point being made in the end and that surely can't make anyone comfortable. Especially not coming from someone who's in power in one of the biggest political powerhouses in the world.
Of course that was only half of the paper anyway, the rest regarded vague language and the straw-man fallacy that uses phrases like "There are those who say", "Some might say", etc, which was actually a repeated line in the speech...the second argument being that what Kennedy thought he was using as a rhetorical device (repetition/emphasis) was actually a rhetorical no-no (the fallacy).
That's the part I'd be lost on. You don't use rhetoric in politics. The whole political stage is a rhetoric...like that, why re-use it?