Natural born citizens also have to work their way up to the dream that they wish to achieve. Although natural born citizens have a better opportunity to achieve that dream they still have to work for it. For instance, in the poem, “Who Burns for the Perfection of Paper”, by Martin Espada, he explains that to get somewhere you need to work for it. “Ten years later, in law school, I knew that every legal pad was glued with the sting of hidden cuts, that every open law book was a pair of hands upturned and burning” (Espada, 83). Espada emphasizes that he went from making the paper, to becoming the user of the paper. This shows that natural born citizens also go through a struggle to work their way up in society. Revisiting Roosevelt's speech he states, “The third freedom from want, which, translated into world terms, means economic understandings which will secure to every nation a healthy peacetime life for its inhabitants - everywhere in the world” (Roosevelt, 46). People have the access, whether they're natural born or immigrants, to work their way you to where they need to go. As long as you work hard, you can achieve the goals and live your life as an American. Just as Roosevelt emphasized “a healthy peacetime of life for all its inhabitants” he shows that anyone has access to the American dream. Not only do they have the access but they can have a peaceful life whilst living that