Not exact matches
As a scholar of American political rhetoric, I've previously written
about the ways that Donald Trump's
rhetorical style mirrors that of polarizing figures like George Wallace and Joseph McCarthy.
No question
about it, the listening is demanding, not only because of the writer's
rhetorical style but also because of the assumption that the reader knows the Old Testament and the wilderness life of Israel, a life centered in the tabernacle and the daily ministrations of the priest.
It's deeply odd, if you think
about it: Reform, long marked by a pugnacious and crusading
rhetorical style, may be losing both its will to fight and its ability to differentiate between genuine threats and mere irritants.