When Barack Obama accepts the Democratic Party’s nomination for
president, he will deliver his speech the way John F. Kennedy did in
1960: in a stadium.
The image of a stadium full of people waiting to hear a speech—a
political speech, no less—underscores a somewhat overlooked aspect of
the American scene: Speeches matter. In a day when comments muttered
into an open microphone, or a distasteful joke captured on YouTube (macaca!)
can alter the course of a campaign, it’s still the vision and policies
outlined in speeches that shape our political landscape.