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šŸ‡®šŸ‡¹ Made in Italy šŸ‡µšŸ‡¾ Proudly based in Paraguay šŸŒŽ Founder @PYpathways šŸ˜ RE investor šŸ— Building a portfolio of local businesses in Paraguay

101 following6k followers

The Entrepreneur

Alessandro Calvo is an Italian-born founder and real-estate investor who transplanted his life to Paraguay and is busy building a portfolio of local businesses through @PYpathways. He mixes cheeky cultural takes with sharp geopolitical threads and practical playbooks for relocation and investing. His voice is direct, opinionated, and built to attract both customers and conversation.

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Alessandro moved continents to escape 'woke' culture, then immediately wrote a viral thread about how great his new life is, congratulations, you’ve successfully outsourced your midlife branding to a different timezone. He’s the kind of guy who says he left Europe for authenticity, but still brings three curated espresso machines and a PowerPoint about 'traditional values.'

Founded PYpathways and translated his relocation story into business traction, a single thread about leaving Europe garnered half a million+ views and thousands of likes, supercharging his reach and credibility as a guide for would-be relocators and investors.

To create real-world businesses and cross-border opportunities that prove a life less tied to European orthodoxies can be more prosperous, freer, and community-driven; to turn his relocation into a repeatable pathway for others who want to build wealth and roots outside the usual hubs.

Values low taxes, traditional social norms, personal responsibility, and entrepreneurial freedom. Deeply skeptical of censorship, polished PR narratives, and what he sees as performative culture. Believes bold choices, frictionless business environments, and hands-on investment build more meaningful results than virtue signaling.

Clear, confident voice that generates high engagement; founder mindset with operational experience in real estate and local ventures; ability to turn personal narrative into useful content that attracts followers and prospective partners; adept at sparking conversation and media-worthy threads.

Polarizing tone that can alienate parts of his audience and create heated replies; sometimes trades nuance for punchy headlines; risk of becoming known more for controversy than sustained, value-first content; occasional echo-chamber reinforcement that limits broader appeal.

Double down on formatted, repeatable threads: 'How I bought my first property in Paraguay (step-by-step)' and 'Monthly portfolio update' series. Post bilingual content (Spanish + English, occasional Italian) to expand reach. Use short video explainers showing local businesses and before/after projects, host X Spaces with local founders, pin a high-value HOW-TO tweet, capture emails with a free relocation checklist, and engage replies with concise, helpful follow-ups to turn controversy into long-term subscribers.

Fun fact: his ā€˜I left Europe for Latin America’ thread exploded, one post reached over 510,000 views and 2,200+ likes, proving his blend of personal story and provocation resonates. He’s Italian, proudly based in Paraguay, founder of PYpathways, and actively building local businesses and real estate there.

Top tweets of Alessandro Calvo

The government of Dubai shut down 1,000 social media accounts in 24 hours. For posting real videos. Saturday I wrote a post about Dubai and the Iranian missiles. The thesis was simple: even the strongest brand in the world does not make you immune to reality. Hundreds of missiles. Three dead. Fifty-eight injured. The Fairmont Hotel on Palm Jumeirah in flames. The airport hit twice. The port of Jebel Ali (36% of Dubai’s GDP) at a standstill. And in the comments, people living in Dubai wrote: ā€œBut almost all the missiles were intercepted. It’s still a safe place.ā€ Under missile fire. Explaining to me that everything is fine. There’s a British trader in Dubai who told Reuters, one of the largest news agencies in the world: ā€œAll the locals tell me, ā€˜nah bro, there’s nothing to worry about.’ And I think… there’s a real war around where you live.ā€ In the same city, at the same time, a Syrian resident was saying: ā€œI don’t see anything serious, just small things. Nothing scary.ā€ And a third guy, hiding in a bathroom, terrified, asked to remain anonymous. Not so much out of fear of the missiles… but out of fear of Dubai’s censorship. Same city. Three completely different perceptions of reality. And censorship is not a detail. While these three were experiencing the same event in three different ways, the Emirati government was shutting down over 1,000 social media accounts of people posting real videos of the missiles. Real videos. The ones that contradicted the official narrative. The penalty for sharing unauthorized footage is up to 12 months in prison and a fine of 100,000 dirhams. Several influencers voluntarily removed their posts. And while people were struggling to sleep from worry… state media were publishing photos of Dubai’s ruler at the horse races: ā€œA special evening with exciting competitions.ā€ Propaganda, beyond creating the bubble… punishes anyone who tries to burst it. And propaganda works, especially on those who are exposed to it up close. It’s the same thing that happens when you’re in love with someone who hurts you. At first you ignore the signs. Something feels off, but you tell yourself you’re overreacting. That it’s your fault for seeing problems where there aren’t any. Then the signs become behaviors. Concrete things. Things that hurt. But by then you’ve invested too much. You’ve told everyone this is the right person. You’ve built your life around that choice. And admitting you were wrong would mean admitting that everything you built rests on a fragile foundation. So you minimize. ā€œWell, that one time didn’t mean anything.ā€ ā€œYeah okay, but usually it’s not like that.ā€ ā€œYou don’t know her the way I do.ā€ And if someone tries to open your eyes, you attack them. Who the hell do you think you are. And you shut down their account. Because they’re attacking your choice. Your identity. What happened in the comments under my post is the exact same mechanism. They’re defending their choice. Dubai has little to do with it. In marketing it’s called investment confirmation. The more a customer invests in a brand—money, time, identity—the more impermeable they become to negative information. At that point the product is secondary. They’re buying confirmation that their choice was right. It’s the restaurant that deletes negative reviews on TripAdvisor. It’s the $5,000 online course that seems amazing because you spent $5,000 and your brain refuses to accept the alternative. It’s the brand that makes you feel part of a tribe and convinces you that anyone who criticizes it ā€œjust doesn’t get it.ā€ Except in the Dubai version, instead of deleted reviews there are closed accounts and threats of prison. And the crazy thing is that it works. Cognitive dissonance is more powerful than any advertising campaign. It’s even more powerful than reality… at least until reality crashes into your living room in the form of a missile. That's it.

131k

I was right about real estate in Paraguay. The resolutions that will come out this week for two of our clients should be more or less number 175 and 176. I am talking about the SUACE resolutions that qualify a person as a relevant investor for the country, allowing them to immediately obtain permanent residency. Looking back, it means that something like half of the relevant investors this year have been helped by Paraguay Pathways. And I've always told them one thing: stay AWAY from real estate. Especially, stay away from all these luxury buildings and skyscrapers. Not everything that shines is gold. More del Sol is empty. Skytower is empty. The One is empty. Emerald is empty. Firenze is empty. The Eminent is empty. Tribeca is empty. Forvm is empty. Flats del Sol is empty. And so on... Every time I visited these building with my clients we didn't meet anyone, anytime. Not in the reception, not in the elevator, not in the gym, not on the rooftop. It's well known that the Argentinians represent almost 100% of the purchases of these buildings. The builders gather the money in Argentina and then they build a huge luxury project in Asunción. The investors in Argentina are so desperate to turn their pesos into a real asset that they don't mind if the yield will be zero, or even if they lose a bit of money: still better than holding pesos. As my prediction goes, the more Milei fixes the economy, the more people will take their capital back to Argentina. It's already happening. You don't meet as many Argentinians as in previous years, not nearly as many. Airbnb is FLOODED with supply. There is just one building I truly like and I truly want to move into. The rental price for 100 m² in this place was 2.200$ last year. It was lowered to 1.900$ three months ago. It was lowered to 1.600$ this week. I think I'll still pass and rent in January for 1.300$. And guess what? With MET Del Sol, Solana, Casa Emme, and then even worse with Petra Icon, Petra Imperial, Paseo 55 and Garden Park, the situation is only getting WORSE. There is space to accomodate 50 000 people in high-end apartments that only 10 000 people in Asunción can afford. And more capacity is coming online by the day. Out of those 10 000, for cultural reasons, 9 000 prefer to have a single family home outside of the city with a dog and a backyard. Do the maths. Rent for a couple years, wait for the Argentinian-fueled crash to bottom out, and THEN buy real estate.

114k

Most engaged tweets of Alessandro Calvo

The government of Dubai shut down 1,000 social media accounts in 24 hours. For posting real videos. Saturday I wrote a post about Dubai and the Iranian missiles. The thesis was simple: even the strongest brand in the world does not make you immune to reality. Hundreds of missiles. Three dead. Fifty-eight injured. The Fairmont Hotel on Palm Jumeirah in flames. The airport hit twice. The port of Jebel Ali (36% of Dubai’s GDP) at a standstill. And in the comments, people living in Dubai wrote: ā€œBut almost all the missiles were intercepted. It’s still a safe place.ā€ Under missile fire. Explaining to me that everything is fine. There’s a British trader in Dubai who told Reuters, one of the largest news agencies in the world: ā€œAll the locals tell me, ā€˜nah bro, there’s nothing to worry about.’ And I think… there’s a real war around where you live.ā€ In the same city, at the same time, a Syrian resident was saying: ā€œI don’t see anything serious, just small things. Nothing scary.ā€ And a third guy, hiding in a bathroom, terrified, asked to remain anonymous. Not so much out of fear of the missiles… but out of fear of Dubai’s censorship. Same city. Three completely different perceptions of reality. And censorship is not a detail. While these three were experiencing the same event in three different ways, the Emirati government was shutting down over 1,000 social media accounts of people posting real videos of the missiles. Real videos. The ones that contradicted the official narrative. The penalty for sharing unauthorized footage is up to 12 months in prison and a fine of 100,000 dirhams. Several influencers voluntarily removed their posts. And while people were struggling to sleep from worry… state media were publishing photos of Dubai’s ruler at the horse races: ā€œA special evening with exciting competitions.ā€ Propaganda, beyond creating the bubble… punishes anyone who tries to burst it. And propaganda works, especially on those who are exposed to it up close. It’s the same thing that happens when you’re in love with someone who hurts you. At first you ignore the signs. Something feels off, but you tell yourself you’re overreacting. That it’s your fault for seeing problems where there aren’t any. Then the signs become behaviors. Concrete things. Things that hurt. But by then you’ve invested too much. You’ve told everyone this is the right person. You’ve built your life around that choice. And admitting you were wrong would mean admitting that everything you built rests on a fragile foundation. So you minimize. ā€œWell, that one time didn’t mean anything.ā€ ā€œYeah okay, but usually it’s not like that.ā€ ā€œYou don’t know her the way I do.ā€ And if someone tries to open your eyes, you attack them. Who the hell do you think you are. And you shut down their account. Because they’re attacking your choice. Your identity. What happened in the comments under my post is the exact same mechanism. They’re defending their choice. Dubai has little to do with it. In marketing it’s called investment confirmation. The more a customer invests in a brand—money, time, identity—the more impermeable they become to negative information. At that point the product is secondary. They’re buying confirmation that their choice was right. It’s the restaurant that deletes negative reviews on TripAdvisor. It’s the $5,000 online course that seems amazing because you spent $5,000 and your brain refuses to accept the alternative. It’s the brand that makes you feel part of a tribe and convinces you that anyone who criticizes it ā€œjust doesn’t get it.ā€ Except in the Dubai version, instead of deleted reviews there are closed accounts and threats of prison. And the crazy thing is that it works. Cognitive dissonance is more powerful than any advertising campaign. It’s even more powerful than reality… at least until reality crashes into your living room in the form of a missile. That's it.

131k

I was right about real estate in Paraguay. The resolutions that will come out this week for two of our clients should be more or less number 175 and 176. I am talking about the SUACE resolutions that qualify a person as a relevant investor for the country, allowing them to immediately obtain permanent residency. Looking back, it means that something like half of the relevant investors this year have been helped by Paraguay Pathways. And I've always told them one thing: stay AWAY from real estate. Especially, stay away from all these luxury buildings and skyscrapers. Not everything that shines is gold. More del Sol is empty. Skytower is empty. The One is empty. Emerald is empty. Firenze is empty. The Eminent is empty. Tribeca is empty. Forvm is empty. Flats del Sol is empty. And so on... Every time I visited these building with my clients we didn't meet anyone, anytime. Not in the reception, not in the elevator, not in the gym, not on the rooftop. It's well known that the Argentinians represent almost 100% of the purchases of these buildings. The builders gather the money in Argentina and then they build a huge luxury project in Asunción. The investors in Argentina are so desperate to turn their pesos into a real asset that they don't mind if the yield will be zero, or even if they lose a bit of money: still better than holding pesos. As my prediction goes, the more Milei fixes the economy, the more people will take their capital back to Argentina. It's already happening. You don't meet as many Argentinians as in previous years, not nearly as many. Airbnb is FLOODED with supply. There is just one building I truly like and I truly want to move into. The rental price for 100 m² in this place was 2.200$ last year. It was lowered to 1.900$ three months ago. It was lowered to 1.600$ this week. I think I'll still pass and rent in January for 1.300$. And guess what? With MET Del Sol, Solana, Casa Emme, and then even worse with Petra Icon, Petra Imperial, Paseo 55 and Garden Park, the situation is only getting WORSE. There is space to accomodate 50 000 people in high-end apartments that only 10 000 people in Asunción can afford. And more capacity is coming online by the day. Out of those 10 000, for cultural reasons, 9 000 prefer to have a single family home outside of the city with a dog and a backyard. Do the maths. Rent for a couple years, wait for the Argentinian-fueled crash to bottom out, and THEN buy real estate.

114k

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