When persuasion stops and violence begins, that’s the line between ‘legitimate political discourse’ and something very different, scholars explain.
AP Photo/John Minchillo
Donald Trump uses language like a dangerous demagogue. The author of a book on Trump’s rhetorical skill gives a guide to the six most important rhetorical strategies Trump uses.
Tallies are displayed as House members vote on a resolution on impeachment procedure on Oct. 31, 2019.
AP/Andrew Harnik
Democrats and Republicans are speaking about impeachment with dramatically different language. The winner of this frame war will succeed in shaping how Americans understand the impeachment inquiry.
They didn’t come out and say what they really mean.
AP Photo/Eric Gay
Americans want government to serve them, but don’t have confidence that it actually can.
Democratic U.S. 2020 election presidential candidates during the second night of the first Democratic presidential candidates’ debate.
REUTERS/Mike Segar
The problems facing America are unrestrained capitalism and corruption, said the Democratic presidential candidates over two nights of debates. Or was that really Teddy Roosevelt speaking?
A sign behind Republican members of the committee during Michael Cohen’s testimony before a House Committee Wednesday.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Michael Cohen wants you to know that throwing your kid a ball doesn’t make you a Red Sox pitcher. So he told lies, he says, but that doesn’t make him a liar. A rhetoric scholar dissects his argument.
After the Manafort and Cohen news dropped, many wondered how Trump would respond. By the following morning, a messaging strategy seemed to coalesce.
Nick Lehr/The Conversation via Reuters and AP Photo
Aristotle coined the term “enthymeme” to refer to arguments, words and ideas that are broadly accepted among the people of a nation. So what happens when enthymemes start to disappear?
An expert in political rhetoric singles out Trump’s repeated use of reification – the tendency to treat people as things – and the role it’s played in his tortured response to the leaked tape.
“Every day I wake up determined to deliver for the people I have met all across this nation that have been neglected, ignored, and abandoned.”
Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Trump appeared surprisingly presidential. According to a scholar of American political rhetoric, there were echoes of Roosevelt, Eisenhower and Reagan.
The nation’s political chasm – already wide – has grown even more since 2012.
'Partisanship' via www.shutterstock.com
Elected officials and the media are in cahoots. Both have succumbed to a two-party system that treats voters not as independent thinkers, but as blind partisans.
‘I’m not saying, I’m just saying.’
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