One example in which he suggests his views are logical is: “Americans want great schools for their children, safe neighborhoods for their families and good jobs for themselves. These are just and reasonable demands of righteous people and a righteous public…”. He also use emotional images that suggest negative feelings (anger, pain, fear): “Mothers and children trapped in poverty in our inner cities, (…) and the crime and the gangs and the drugs that have stolen too many lives and robbed our country of so much unrealized potential.” He used such negative feelings because he wants to suggest that he is the one who can change things in the US. The main aim of Trump’s speech is to gain the public acceptance and mark himself as a leader who is different from typical politicians. He said he would bring back jobs, tighten the borders, strengthen the military, rebuild infrastructure and make a new era of prosperity. He closed with the signature motto of his campaign. "Together, we will make America strong again," he said. "We will make America wealthy again. We will make America proud again. We will make American safe again. And, yes, together, we will make America great …show more content…
The first that issue Baldwin focused on is his personal approach as African American. He addressed the racial problems surrounding him from this very viewpoint, a viewpoint that extends over the content of both essays. One of the largest and most recognizable themes dealt with by Baldwin is the role of Christianity in relation to the “Negro Problem.” Baldwin addresses Christianity’s role both in American society and in the overall oppression of the Negro race. In addition to Christianity, Baldwin also takes issue with The Nation of Islam, a form of Islam practiced in the black community. Baldwin himself was Christian and one point, and so examines the faith from this standpoint. He explains his happiness at first becoming a Christian, his involvement with the tenets of his new belief system, his growing disillusionment, and his eventual abandonment of the church due to the various hypocrisies he felt it guilty of. Baldwin noticed these hypocrisies as he became older, and ruminates on how these contradictions within the church affected American life, and continue to do so. Boldly, Baldwin suggests that the only way for America to live up to its potential, its ideals of freedom and individuality, is to abandon Christian teaching altogether.Another one of most notable themes of The Fire Next Time is communication. Throughout both essays, Baldwin implores a