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John F. Kennedy Rhetorical Context: The Audience Term Paper

John F. Kennedy Rhetorical context: The audience is a conservative political group that advocates smaller federal government and the right for local communities and states to control as much of their needed government as possible. The occasion is their annual meeting, and the purpose is to demonstrate that although Kennedy was a liberal in many ways, he was still a great, if flawed, man.

John F. Kennedy: the very name makes political conservatives cringe. However, his short role in the political history of the Presidency was so pivotal that is necessary to consider what kind of President he really was beyond the hype and the active public relations campaign that kept his many flaws out of the news media. Because the media remained silent about his personal flaws, the country was able to nearly canonize him after his untimely death.

He was a Liberal. Of that there is no doubt. He pondered how best to improve the rights of Negroes, and supported the idea of a larger government. That is the hidden message in his famous quote: Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." He didn't ask us to help our local government or work at the state level. He wanted to expand federal government, of that there is no doubt.

And yet, in his short-term in office, he turned...

from a stalemate into something where the United States had the upper hand. He and Kruschev went eye-to-eye over the Cuban Missile Crisis, and Kruschev blinked first. Not everyone wants a strong central government that can manage all our health care, provide a generous welfare system and take over how the public schools are run, but we can all agree that until we gained the upper hand in the Cold War, we lived under the constant threat of a pre-emptive nuclear attack from the U.S.S.R.
What is forgotten about Kennedy is that he actually won the election by a very small margin. While he was inaugurated as President, he did not win any great or sweeping mandate from the public. In fact he passed few domestic bills during his short-range, but he did fight for his country in the international arena. He maintained our involvement in Viet Nam, knowing that our influence there might make a big difference in the ideologies of the region. It is not his fault that this policy was handled badly after his death.

Kennedy was a weak man in many ways. We know now that his philandering knew no limits and included at least woman with ties to the Mafia. WE know that he often took significant amounts of pain pills because of an extremely painful and chronic back injury. We know that he could…

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For all his flaws, John F. Kennedy was a great president who understood the Communist threat at the most important level. Because he was willing to stand up to the Russians during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the United States triumphed over our greatest enemy without a single battle. By doing this, he made the end of the Cold War inevitable.

Source:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/state/monarchs_leaders/kennedy_celebrity_01.shtml
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