Click me
Transcribed

President Bush's State of the Union Addresses Infographics

2003: terror, dollar, million, security, weapon 1 2001: budget, fund, government, health, spend 2002: terror, security, Afghanistan, energy, weapon George W. Bush: A legacy that speaks for itself In eight State of the Union Addresses, President George W. Bush spoke almost 50,000 words. People around the world were listening, and his words were chosen with care, conveying precisely the right message. These sentence diagrams are an attempt to relate some of the substance of the words President Bush used. Starting at the black dot • (and ending at the red •), each line segment represents the length 2008: congress, terror, trust, Iraq, fight 2004: Iraq, terror, weapon, Saddam, Hussein of each sentence spoken. Each sentence is in turn colored according to its subject: our nation in general (American, nation, citizen, etc.), national ideals (freedom, hope, liberty, etc.), fiscal/economic policy (budget, economy, funding, etc.), domestic policy (health, reform, insurance, etc.), security/foreign policy (terror, Iraq, troops, etc.), and everything else. From these rough outlines, and a short list of President Bush's most frequently used uncommon words, one can get a general idea of the nature of each Address, and we can begin to envision the legacy established by Mr. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States of America. 2005: freedom, security, terror, government, economy 2007: terror, Iraq, congress, fund, health 2006: terror, freedom, economy, congress, fight 2003: terror, dollar, million, security, weapon 1 2001: budget, fund, government, health, spend 2002: terror, security, Afghanistan, energy, weapon George W. Bush: A legacy that speaks for itself In eight State of the Union Addresses, President George W. Bush spoke almost 50,000 words. People around the world were listening, and his words were chosen with care, conveying precisely the right message. These sentence diagrams are an attempt to relate some of the substance of the words President Bush used. Starting at the black dot • (and ending at the red •), each line segment represents the length 2008: congress, terror, trust, Iraq, fight 2004: Iraq, terror, weapon, Saddam, Hussein of each sentence spoken. Each sentence is in turn colored according to its subject: our nation in general (American, nation, citizen, etc.), national ideals (freedom, hope, liberty, etc.), fiscal/economic policy (budget, economy, funding, etc.), domestic policy (health, reform, insurance, etc.), security/foreign policy (terror, Iraq, troops, etc.), and everything else. From these rough outlines, and a short list of President Bush's most frequently used uncommon words, one can get a general idea of the nature of each Address, and we can begin to envision the legacy established by Mr. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States of America. 2005: freedom, security, terror, government, economy 2007: terror, Iraq, congress, fund, health 2006: terror, freedom, economy, congress, fight 14 2003: terror, dollar, million, security, weapon 1 2001: budget, fund, government, health, spend 2002: terror, security, Afghanistan, energy, weapon George W. Bush: A legacy that speaks for itself In eight State of the Union Addresses, President George W. Bush spoke almost 50,000 words. People around the world were listening, and his words were chosen with care, conveying precisely the right message. These sentence diagrams are an attempt to relate some of the substance of the words President Bush used. Starting at the black dot • (and ending at the red •), each line segment represents the length 2008: congress, terror, trust, Iraq, fight 2004: Iraq, terror, weapon, Saddam, Hussein of each sentence spoken. Each sentence is in turn colored according to its subject: our nation in general (American, nation, citizen, etc.), national ideals (freedom, hope, liberty, etc.), fiscal/economic policy (budget, economy, funding, etc.), domestic policy (health, reform, insurance, etc.), security/foreign policy (terror, Iraq, troops, etc.), and everything else. From these rough outlines, and a short list of President Bush's most frequently used uncommon words, one can get a general idea of the nature of each Address, and we can begin to envision the legacy established by Mr. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States of America. 2005: freedom, security, terror, government, economy 2007: terror, Iraq, congress, fund, health 2006: terror, freedom, economy, congress, fight 14 2003: terror, dollar, million, security, weapon 1 2001: budget, fund, government, health, spend 2002: terror, security, Afghanistan, energy, weapon George W. Bush: A legacy that speaks for itself In eight State of the Union Addresses, President George W. Bush spoke almost 50,000 words. People around the world were listening, and his words were chosen with care, conveying precisely the right message. These sentence diagrams are an attempt to relate some of the substance of the words President Bush used. Starting at the black dot • (and ending at the red •), each line segment represents the length 2008: congress, terror, trust, Iraq, fight 2004: Iraq, terror, weapon, Saddam, Hussein of each sentence spoken. Each sentence is in turn colored according to its subject: our nation in general (American, nation, citizen, etc.), national ideals (freedom, hope, liberty, etc.), fiscal/economic policy (budget, economy, funding, etc.), domestic policy (health, reform, insurance, etc.), security/foreign policy (terror, Iraq, troops, etc.), and everything else. From these rough outlines, and a short list of President Bush's most frequently used uncommon words, one can get a general idea of the nature of each Address, and we can begin to envision the legacy established by Mr. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States of America. 2005: freedom, security, terror, government, economy 2007: terror, Iraq, congress, fund, health 2006: terror, freedom, economy, congress, fight 14 2003: terror, dollar, million, security, weapon 1 2001: budget, fund, government, health, spend 2002: terror, security, Afghanistan, energy, weapon George W. Bush: A legacy that speaks for itself In eight State of the Union Addresses, President George W. Bush spoke almost 50,000 words. People around the world were listening, and his words were chosen with care, conveying precisely the right message. These sentence diagrams are an attempt to relate some of the substance of the words President Bush used. Starting at the black dot • (and ending at the red •), each line segment represents the length 2008: congress, terror, trust, Iraq, fight 2004: Iraq, terror, weapon, Saddam, Hussein of each sentence spoken. Each sentence is in turn colored according to its subject: our nation in general (American, nation, citizen, etc.), national ideals (freedom, hope, liberty, etc.), fiscal/economic policy (budget, economy, funding, etc.), domestic policy (health, reform, insurance, etc.), security/foreign policy (terror, Iraq, troops, etc.), and everything else. From these rough outlines, and a short list of President Bush's most frequently used uncommon words, one can get a general idea of the nature of each Address, and we can begin to envision the legacy established by Mr. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States of America. 2005: freedom, security, terror, government, economy 2007: terror, Iraq, congress, fund, health 2006: terror, freedom, economy, congress, fight 14 2003: terror, dollar, million, security, weapon 1 2001: budget, fund, government, health, spend 2002: terror, security, Afghanistan, energy, weapon George W. Bush: A legacy that speaks for itself In eight State of the Union Addresses, President George W. Bush spoke almost 50,000 words. People around the world were listening, and his words were chosen with care, conveying precisely the right message. These sentence diagrams are an attempt to relate some of the substance of the words President Bush used. Starting at the black dot • (and ending at the red •), each line segment represents the length 2008: congress, terror, trust, Iraq, fight 2004: Iraq, terror, weapon, Saddam, Hussein of each sentence spoken. Each sentence is in turn colored according to its subject: our nation in general (American, nation, citizen, etc.), national ideals (freedom, hope, liberty, etc.), fiscal/economic policy (budget, economy, funding, etc.), domestic policy (health, reform, insurance, etc.), security/foreign policy (terror, Iraq, troops, etc.), and everything else. From these rough outlines, and a short list of President Bush's most frequently used uncommon words, one can get a general idea of the nature of each Address, and we can begin to envision the legacy established by Mr. Bush, the 43rd President of the United States of America. 2005: freedom, security, terror, government, economy 2007: terror, Iraq, congress, fund, health 2006: terror, freedom, economy, congress, fight 14

President Bush's State of the Union Addresses Infographics

shared by rmmojado on Dec 22
302 views
0 shares
0 comments
Inspired by the amazing infographics of Stephanie Posavec’s "On The Map," David Sparks of The Arbitrarian blog put together his own set of sentence diagrams, focusing on the State of the Union Addre...

Category

Politics
Did you work on this visual? Claim credit!

Get a Quote

Embed Code

For hosted site:

Click the code to copy

For wordpress.com:

Click the code to copy
Customize size