Speech At Brandenburg Gate Speech Analysis

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Although President Ronald Reagan’s speech at Brandenburg Gate is most known for his demand for tearing down the Berlin wall, his speech was a motivational speech to encourage the Germans of freedom to come. He wanted to encourage the world for that matter that at some point Germany and the entire Soviet Union would be free and safe. President Reagan does a side by side comparison of what freedom can do to society. He explains this through the comparison of post-war Germany to the Soviet Union and the 1987 industrial West-Berlin. Reagan describes the Soviet Union as unable to feed themselves, but reminds everyone what has worked to solve peace and happiness is freedom. This kind of freedom that President Reagan speaks of is freedom to free enterprise, basic needs, and security. …show more content…

This matches President Reagan’s prediction of the harsh conditions the Soviet Union would be in after the fall. It later shows that freedom is really what can lead to prosperity. President Reagan speaks of how he sees a future within the Soviet Union, but President Reagan at Brandenburg Gate wanted to push Mikhail Gorbachev into making a larger statement that Freedom was to come. Many people believe that Reagan’s speech lead to the fall of the wall, but the wall didn’t fall until 1989. It seems, as History.com Staff has put it in the “Fall of the Soviet Union,” ultimately it happened because the Soviet Union had cut down on its military size allowing for small independence movements to spring

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