From the 1700-1938, the public arena for the debate of assimilation helped get information out into the public eye. Whether the debates were formed through non-Native Americans or Native, the final outcomes were put into essays, letters, pamphlets, speeches, drawings, and other forms of media, pertaining to the different time periods. Without the different public communications platforms, there wouldn’t have been any room for debating assimilation, and the outcome of history would have been drastically changed. With that being said, different people realized the potential of this power, and used it to their advantage. With documents taken from “The Cherokee Removal” and “Talking Back to Civilization”, it is shown that the methods used to…