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Les mots favoris des présidents américains

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  • Les mots favoris des présidents américains

    Cyberpresse
    Franklin D. Roosevelt privilégiait «War », JF Kennedy : «New», Jimmy Carter «Soviet» et Bill Clinton «People». À l'occasion du discours sur l'état de l'Union, le site DailyBeast a analysé 20 des plus célèbres discours présentés par les chefs d'État américains pour en faire ressortir les mots les plus utilisés par chacun d'eux.

    L'exercice graphique, révélateur, trace un portrait des temps forts des derniers présidents. L'an dernier, Barack Obama avait, en 6095 mots -et 51 minutes- surtout employé «American», «economy», «people» et «health». Cette fois-ci, même si ce n'est pas le plus récurrent, le mot Spoutnik sera certainement le plus associé au dernier discours de l'actuel président.

    Voyez la série de graphiques sur theDailybeast.com


    Woodrow Wilson

    December 4, 1917
    3,918 words
    28 minutes (est.)
    America was more than six months into World War I when Woodrow Wilson, the first modern president to turn the State of the Union into a speech rather than a written report, addressed Congress for the fifth time, and it shows in Wilson’s words: German, War, Peace, and Purpose loom large.

    Warren G. Harding

    December 8, 1922
    5,745 words
    39 minutes (est.)
    Where would the country head after World War I? Warren G. Harding had a vision for normalcy, a return to life before the war, which in practice meant a federal program to expand the nation’s highways, a conciliatory attitude toward labor groups, support for anti-lynching legislation, and a “Voyage of Understanding” in 1923 that saw an ailing Harding attempt to reconnect with Americans and become the first president to visit Alaska and CanadA

    Calvin Coolidge

    December 6, 1923
    6,703 words
    48 minutes (est.)
    For a president who advocated for smaller government, Calvin Coolidge sure let Government play a prominent role in his first State of the Union address. This speech by “Silent Cal”—so called for being a man of few words in private—was the first to be broadcast nationally on the radio.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt

    January 3, 1934
    2,230 words
    16 minutes (est.)
    Still lurching out of the Great Depression, Roosevelt provided guidance on how citizens could find jobs and, most of all, how they could come together and recover as a nation from a devastating economic crisis whose repercussions were still felt.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt

    January 6, 1942
    3,511 words
    25 minutes (est.) 

    This speech, one of the most significant State of the Union addresses ever, took place just a month after Pearl Harbor as evidenced by the dominant word of the speech: WAR.

    Franklin Delano Roosevelt

    January 7, 1943
    4,588 words
    33 minutes (est.)
    More war talk, but this time, the word clouds reflect the arsenal of democracy’s transformation into the world’s industrial superpower.
    The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.” Winston Churchill

  • #2
    Harry S. Truman

    January 9, 1952
    5,368 words
    39 minutes (est.)
    After entering the U.S. in the Korean War in 1950, Truman’s eighth and final State of the Union address emphasized war—and peace.

    Dwight D. Eisenhower

    January 9, 1958
    4,929 words
    35 minutes (est.)
    A few months after Sputnik, Ike’s sixth State of the Union address reflected the Cold War.

    John F. Kennedy

    January 11, 1962
    6,573 words
    48 minutes (est.)
    America’s dashing young president exemplified all that was exciting about the still-new decade in his second State of the Union address.

    Lyndon B. Johnson

    January 8, 1964
    3,208 words
    23 minutes (est.)
    Just two months after the assassination of JFK, Lyndon B. Johnson was about to embark on the most extensive legislative agenda of the past 50 years. Tellingly, the overbearing “Johnson Treatment” came through in this speech, and in one word: “Must.”

    Lyndon B. Johnson

    January 12, 1966
    5,547 words
    50 minutes

    Richard M. Nixon

    January 30, 1974
    5,170 words
    42 minutes
    At the height of Watergate, one world was barely mentioned: Watergate. “I believe the time has come to bring that investigation and the other investigations of this matter to an end. One year of Watergate is enough,” Nixon said, in the second of two Watergate mentions in this speech. Six months later, Nixon left the White House permanently.
    The Vietnam War escalates—and eventually takes down Johnson’s presidency.

    Gerald Ford

    January 15, 1975
    4,130 words
    41 minutes
    “The state of the union is not good,” Gerald Ford, The Accidental President, said in his first State of the Union address. Besides Watergate fallout and inflation, America was caught between two energy crises.

    Jimmy Carter

    January 23, 1980
    3,423 words
    32 minutes
    When Carter gave this address in 1980, Americans were reeling from the Iranian hostage crisis, as well as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, which Carter called “the most serious threat to peace since the Second World War.”

    Ronald Reagan

    January 26, 1982
    5,230 words
    40 minutes
    Reagan used his speech to defend his tax cuts and the federal government’s total fiscal responsibility for Medicaid that would take effect in 1984.
    The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.” Winston Churchill

    Commentaire


    • #3
      George H.W. Bush

      January 29, 1991
      3,968 words
      48 minutes
      In 1990, Bush announced a “New World Order”—Nelson Mandela was freed from prison, the USSR was on the brink of self-destruction, the Berlin Wall tumbled and Iraq invaded Kuwait in the Persian Gulf War.

      Bill Clinton

      January 25, 1994
      7,455 words
      1 hour, 3 minutes
      Holding the mockup for a health-care card aloft, Clinton promised that 1994 would be the year “we will make history by reforming the health-care system.”

      George W. Bush

      January 29, 2002
      3,778 words
      48 minutes
      Just four months after the September 11th attacks, Bush declared Iran, Iraq, and North Korea an “axis of evil.”

      George W. Bush

      January 28, 2003
      5,417 words
      59 minutes
      Bush laid the case for invading Iraq, including the infamous “16 words” he neve should have said.

      Barack Obama

      February 24, 2009
      6,095 words
      51 minutes
      Though the country was embittered and bruised by the Great Recession, President Obama was riding the initial wave of popularity with a 69 percent approval rating. On his agenda: jobs, tax cuts and increased accountability from banks and housing lenders.
      The truth is incontrovertible, malice may attack it, ignorance may deride it, but in the end; there it is.” Winston Churchill

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