The Level Up Podcast w/ Paul Alex - From Homeless To 9 Figure Real Estate Mogul Saving Children Around The World William Fonseca
Episode Date: January 11, 2026From sleeping under bridges to building a 9-figure real estate empire, William Fonseca has lived through darkness most people never escape — addiction, homelessness, abuse, and complete loss. But in...stead of letting his past define him, William transformed his pain into a global mission: saving and educating children around the world through purpose-driven real estate and charitable work. In this powerful and deeply emotional conversation, William breaks down the moment faith redirected his entire life, how he rebuilt from absolutely nothing, and why serving others became the center of his entrepreneurial success. His story is raw, unfiltered, and a reminder that no matter how far you fall, you can rise even higher. 🌎 Want to connect with William Fonseca? Email: wmfonseca@comcast.net Website: wynwooddaycare.com 🎧 If you're searching for inspiration, purpose, or proof that your past doesn’t define your destiny — this episode is for you. Make sure to add me on all social platforms: Instagram: https://jo.my/paulalex2024 Facebook: https://jo.my/fbpaulalex2024 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNB9ivoJf7ppjuSplOAkEZw LinkedIn: https://jo.my/inpaulalex2024 Looking for a secondary source of income or want to become an entrepreneur? Check out one of my companies below: www.CashSwipe.com FREE Copy of my book “Blue to Digital Gold - The New American Dream”:www.officialPaulAlex.com Your Network Is Your Net Worth! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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If you care about your digital safety, you should know what's happening behind the headlines.
Hi, it's Leo Lipport here.
And each week on Security Now, Steve Gibson and I explain what's happening in the world of digital security.
Threats, reaches, clever hacks, and the policies that affect all of us.
We take the complex and make it understandable.
If you want to stay safe and informed, this is your show.
Every Tuesday at twit.tv slash SN.
I'm right in the path of this place where all these people are trafficked.
You see a lot of kids that are taken for the sex industry.
And it takes me back to that store where I worked as a stock boy for $25 a week would tie me up
and touch me in a walking cooler and I didn't have anybody to go to.
Homeless on the final stretch of my three years,
they reached out of the window and offered me a piece of paper with an address and scripture verse.
Knock on the door of this place and this guy opens the door.
I'm trying to convince this cat that I need five bucks to eat and this guy wants
to feed me, but I want the five bucks.
Because with a $5 rock, I can just, boom, cure myself for the next five seconds.
That's an everlasting year.
You're just chasing that devil.
The guy tells me, if you give me a year of your life, I guarantee you that God will restore
you 100%, and then more.
They took me into the shower.
They paid me.
Never seen a human being so loving.
All it took is was somebody to give me that unconditional love.
I've decided to dedicate my life to helping others.
Hey, guys, and welcome back to Love Love Love All-Pod.
This is Paul Alex.
And today we have another phenomenal guest, guys.
But before we get into it, I just want to say thank you for the 4 million downloads that we had previous, this previous month back in, what month are we in, Emilio?
September, yeah.
So we're in September right now going into October, guys.
So we're expecting about 5 million this month.
But because of you, we've ranked top three in all categories and number one in business guys.
So we're going to be bringing in phenomenal guests to hear their stories so you guys could get inspired to level up in your life.
So today's guest, he is a Miami local.
Actually, he's seen the Windwood District area through all its stages.
And I can't wait to interview this guest.
He goes by the name of William.
And William, welcome to the show, brother.
Thank you for having me.
No, absolutely, man.
So, William, let my audience know who you are and what is it that you do right now?
So I am a developer.
born and raised in the Alapada area.
Developed about a thousand doors in my career.
Mainly focused my career in neglected areas.
My colleagues got to do a lot with fallen men,
people with issues, access, how do you provide?
Why don't you want to just be in this particular area?
So I'm a pioneer from the windward, the Alapata, the Overtown, Liberty City area.
So that's mainly my main focus.
And I've been at it for 27, 28 years, literally.
After a thousand doors, I kind of like hung my gloves and I'm involved in ministry.
So my background is faith after turmoil that occurred many years ago.
So being or given the opportunity or my calling being and neglect the neighborhoods,
spiraling out of control, falling, getting back up, devoted for the past 25 years the reach to help
others, men that are fallen.
I love that, man.
So you're faith-based, and now you're going into your beliefs to help other people.
So let's talk about your humble beginnings, okay?
How did you end up getting into real estate?
So mainly it's just the environment you're raised in, your community access.
Kind of like not satisfied with no.
It's like no is a very powerful word, not satisfied with the interpretation.
But if you tell me no, then I need to find out why and why it takes me to being curious.
So mainly my career started in that type of neighborhood, neglected neighborhoods, just because my colleagues decided to go to Coral Gables in upper-scale neighborhoods, and that didn't make any sense to me.
Yeah, and at what age did you get into real estate?
So I'm an electrician by trade, so I got into the construction business at 17. I did an apprenticeship program.
Not very good of going to school at all, at all.
I just couldn't, I could not dissect in school, a teacher trying to teach me how to use a calculator
when I didn't need one.
So for me, it was like, no, you're going to stress me out.
So I'm just going to get out of school.
So I did an apprenticeship program that led me to the building industry.
And that took me into the development.
Wow.
So as 17 years old, you got into construction.
Did you graduate high school?
Yeah, I graduated out of night school.
Night school?
But just to say that I graduated.
I like that.
It doesn't make any sense to me.
Yeah, because some of the best entrepreneurs that I've met, like, they've had a hard time either at school or they've excelled.
It's either or there's no, like, medium, right?
Yeah, it's like you're telling me to read this whole book and I don't need to go through the whole book.
It's just, give me a piece of the book and I can just tell you the whole story.
And if you can't dissect that, then I'm not the proper student.
So let me just walk out.
So for me, it was like, okay, I'll do night school because it's part of the apprenticeship program.
I'll go and I'll BS my way through it.
And that's it and just get it done.
Taking imperfect action, brother.
I love it.
I love it.
Would you say you're more of a visionary guy or implementer?
Well, I'm a pioneer.
So, yeah, it goes hands-to-hand.
Yeah, how can you go into a place that's highly distrust?
When nobody wants to be there because you're going to get killed or there's a lot of dope going on.
It's like, it's a challenge.
Yeah.
It's a challenge.
Yeah.
No, absolutely.
Okay.
So 17 years, you get into construction.
Did you end up having a mentor while you were doing construction?
No, it was just an opportunity.
to look at these particular areas with a different lens.
And I just, like, somebody invested in me and looked at me and said,
well, I don't see that fallen man in you or that fallen human.
I see something else in you.
And I said, well, you don't have a crystal ball.
I don't know who you are.
And it's the same thing.
I looked at a particular area not too far from where I was born.
And I saw so much potential.
It's, it's Prada 5, it's got downtown Miami.
You incorporate. You're born with that.
Yeah. No, absolutely.
So you end up getting into the construction game,
and then how many years were you doing construction
before you started getting into the next level of rail?
So I had a successful electrical business for many, many years.
And across the street from where I lived, it was,
so I lived in Cutler Ridge in an area that a big developer here in the Linar
at one turn or another had developed the area and had left scattered lots.
And there was an old man there, Vincent, in his 70s.
And he would build these cookie cutters.
And that kind of attracted me.
And I used to go out to the field, you know, 5.36 in the morning until around 2 o'clock.
And I mean, I struck a deal with him.
And I said, look, listen, if you can just teach me mechanically how to do this,
I'll go ahead and I'll give you my time on the weekends.
And in the middle of the day, and you don't have to pay me.
And I can learn how to run with it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was the biggest gift.
I love that.
I received.
Beautiful.
And then what happened next?
I take off with that particular scene.
And since I'm living down south, I spot an area where it had potential to erect probably a couple hundred homes.
If you did the entitlements right, if you did the rezoning right.
But you needed one key thing.
I had a successful electrical business.
and you have the liquid to do the transition, to do the acquisition.
Now you've got a little bit of time and training in the building industry, and you're an electrician,
so you've got a lot of knowledge in the interpretation of construction documents.
And what happened was I put my eye on this particular parcel,
and I bought into what was the disaster that took me to success,
the intent to buy this parcel to erect these homes, you need the upfront money. It's what they call
the upfront money to go to the bank and get to construction loan, and you dump all this ton of cash
into escrow, and these are your friends and their attorneys, and they bail with your money.
Wow.
And there it starts. That's where the success starts, when disaster starts occurring in your life.
and that took me down the path where made me who I am today.
So I bought into that particular scene, wound it up broke,
and instead of folding and attaching to the law,
it decided to liquidate, make everybody whole, and wound up broke.
At what age were you?
So you're dealing with 21, 22.
So at 2122, everything just goes to shambles, man.
It starts.
It starts.
So that was the beginning of, like, the bigger issue.
That was the beginning of the successful story.
But one of the things that I like as I go around the world or around the country speaking
and uplifting fallen men is that everybody comes now into your life and they want to see
what's already done.
I call it the result.
It's the process nobody wants to talk about.
They see what's there.
So that takes me to a relationship that takes me down a path that it involves, obviously, drugs.
And I started to smoke cocaine.
Wow.
Yeah, wow.
So would you be able to walk us through?
So at 21, 22, you're going through all these issues in business.
And I always see this, you know, when you're like a true entrepreneur, a true entrepreneur,
and you have employees, you have assets, you have, you have, you know,
cash flow coming in, and then something massive happens, like your first critical incident
in business, it really shows who you are, like how you handle pressure, right?
So for me, for me, the opportunity of edifying or lifting myself up on the impact
was not an option.
Yeah.
That wasn't an option.
It wasn't on the table.
Yeah.
I couldn't have asked for it today as a result that it has.
I would not change anything.
the wounds are there, the war stories are there.
It's what helps me communicate or transmit the message of kind of like dictating the result.
Just because you're in the rut doesn't mean that that's where you're going to stay.
So for me, that particular moment, was there an exit strategy?
Yeah, for sure.
Did I take it?
No.
I needed to allocate value.
The knowledge was there, so you can't strip me of that.
but I wanted to look at the other side of the fence.
I just had no idea what was on the other side of the fence,
which I've got a good saying,
God doesn't call capacitated men.
God capacitates you.
So I had no knowledge of that that was going to happen.
So as that turmoil kicks in,
you get into this relationship.
There's this component that's going to spiral out of control,
and it's going to put me in a very unique area.
It's going to put me in an area
where I'm going to acquire a penthouse, the most beautiful penhouse I've had, I had it for
about 37 months under the 17th Avenue Bridge. Waterfront, you couldn't ask for a better
position. There, there I met the most interesting human fallen men and women. The talent that
was embedded in these humans was amazing. And I gave myself the opportunity of allowing me to be
there till somebody actually came with what I call a tract. It's a piece of paper that had two folded
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If you care about your digital safety, you should know what's happening behind the headlines.
Hi, it's Leo Leport here, and each week on security now, Steve Gibson and I explain what's happening
in the world of digital security, threats, reaches, clever hacks, and the policies that affect all of us.
we take the complex and make it understandable.
If you want to stay safe and informed, this is your show.
Every Tuesday at twit.tv slash SN.
Now, what delays the blessing is the disobedient,
not allowing that particular hump.
So I speak a lot about the hump.
What does the hump do for you?
It directs you in the right way.
If you give yourself the opportunity to look at the hump,
the hump is full of treasures.
Success obviously comes from that disaster.
You allocate value to that particular disaster,
and you're going to look at that hump has full of treasures.
That turns out to be the human that you are today.
That hump took me to that particular human.
They reached out of the window and offered me a piece of paper with an address
and a scripture verse.
Homeless, on the final stretch of my three years,
I started walking towards that address to ask for money.
I hadn't slept in probably a few days
because you can't sleep under a bridge.
You can mimic it, but it's so dangerous and it's so dark.
And you meet humans that are actually,
I call them the gremlin's come out at night.
I mean, it's like, wow, the environment,
the dynamics just change.
Yeah, yeah.
So you've seen both sides of the world?
I've seen not having anything come.
Coming from a middle-class family where my dad had two jobs, so my dad was a union
delegator for the Hultow industry in Miami Beach when Miami Beach was a different scene,
a brother going to medical school and the firstborn, everybody's going to focus on the firstborn,
on the black sheep of the family, the middle one, and then the younger sister and we're being cheated
out of this whole scene.
and everybody's focusing on paying my brother's tuition.
And hey, we're out in the cold and who are we, you know, chop levered.
So coming from that environment to taking that leap of faith to going out
and becoming an entrepreneur and experimenting with the private sector
and launching that campaign to taking me to being homeless is like,
wow, if you were to make me another offer to change time,
no, not in a million years, buddy.
I would not take you up.
What an experience.
It's actually a component that makes me who I am.
So I don't come from a wealthy family.
I come from a middle-class family.
So they're going to cut the light today
because we've got to send $20,000 up
to my brother's medical tuition,
that kind of environment.
And what are we?
I got to put rubber bands on my socks
because they're slipping down
because the elastic is torn out,
that kind of a scene.
So, I mean, I come from that environment
to taking that leap of faith to, if you can't handle the conditions in my house,
I'm the head honcho, and if you don't like it, well, you've got to leave,
and I'm going to take you up on the word, and you're 17 years old, and you're leaving home,
and what's the effect that's going to happen when you're 17 years old and you're leaving home?
All you're going to do is crash and burn, crash and burn, crash and burn.
So that's non-negotiable for me.
There's no money.
There's nothing that you can offer me to change that, because I wouldn't for nothing.
It's part of who I am today, and those are my,
wounds to others, but those are, that's where I found success in the rut, in the gutter.
That's what I call it the hump.
That's where success lies because without the hump, you can't tell the story to have a
beautiful result.
Man, I feel like I resonate with you so much, brother, because, you know, I'm hard-headed.
So I had to go through my humps, you know, throughout my 20s, throughout my teenage years.
You know, the very first time I actually wanted to become an entrepreneur was at 18.
all the way up to about like 24.
I was actually in the nightclub industry.
And not a lot of people know that,
but, you know, I was very decently successful
in the nightclubs for that age, brother.
I was bringing in, you know, good amount of money.
If I had the right mentor,
if I had the right person to tell me like Paul,
instead of using that money to go to Vegas,
to go spending on girls,
to go buy the cars,
to go live that lavish lifestyle as a kid,
which we see it a lot here in Miami, right, with the kids.
man, I'd probably be in a different space right now.
But at the end of the day, you know, I went back to the 9 to 5, man.
I went back to corporate America because I remember my parents telling me like,
hey, give up on your dream.
Give up on your dream about only a nightclub and go back to that 9 to 5, right?
Security, right, that nice umbrella.
So with that being said, brother, so you go through this turmoil,
you go through this hard times.
What happens next?
So now I'm hooked on dope.
I'm homeless.
And I'm on my final stretch of looking at this little piece of,
of paper, so I'm a result of a piece of paper, an address.
In a biblical verse, it didn't make any sense to me.
It said, John 316.
I said, I don't care who John is.
I don't care what 360 means.
I don't care about these little hands.
So I've gone from a middle-class family to a successful businessman.
I've gone into the rut.
I'm not a very good thieves.
I'm not a very good crook.
I'm not a very good criminal.
So mainly my survival mode was what kicked in.
So people misunderstand when they look at society that some people are actually not given the opportunity to live.
They're actually obligated to survive.
And that's two different things.
It's two different worlds.
Now I'm coming from learning how to survive into this little piece of paper.
I'm going to go down Flagler Street here in Miami, and I'm going to head to 35th Avenue there.
I see a church, and it's all closed and it's fence.
And I say, well, you know what?
I'm going to knock on the door and I'm going to ask for five bucks to eat.
and if I don't get five bucks eat,
I'm going to find,
I'm going to find something here
because I'm Jones and I'm really Jones and
I'm smoking coke.
I'm free base in cocaine.
And I'm broke.
It's a $3 bill.
I'm 100 pounds wet.
I haven't bathed in about three days
and I'm literally heading towards
destruction more at a mode
where the only thing that actually
kept me from shooting myself
was
maybe
It's just because I'm brave, or maybe I'm a coward,
but at the end of the day, that particular scene didn't kick in.
So I knock on the door of this place and this guy opens the door.
And I tell the guy, after I had jumped that five-foot fence,
I'd go to the door, I'd knock on these two big doors,
3501 West Flagler.
It used to be an old Christian church now with the Brazilian body a few years ago.
Now I'm in front of this white-headed dude,
and I'm telling the dude, I'm trying to convince this cat that I need five bucks to eat.
And this guy wants to feed me, but I want the five bucks because with a $5 rock,
I can just, boom, cure myself for the next five seconds and go on that mission again.
And if you were in law enforcement, you know that that's an everlasting year.
You're just chasing that devil.
You're chasing it.
You're never going to get that satisfaction.
But now I don't come from that environment, but I'm in that environment, and I'm trying to dissect this thing.
why am I wanting this more than food when this guy walks out and I go on the back here on the back
parking lot. This is a huge property. It's on 35th and Flagler. You can go there. You want.
Brazilians have a church there. But anyway, I look at this prayer chain. What I understand now it's a prayer
change, but there's these old ladies just chanting and I'm sitting. They asked me to sit. And they're
talking about this cat that's going to walk into these doors that's a self-made successful million
air that is dragged like a mop all over the street and is falling.
And I'm looking at these people and I'm thinking, what is this?
Are these people into witchcraft?
What's going on with these?
These are Puerto Ricans.
That's why I love Puerto Ricans so much.
Makes sense.
Makes sense.
Now, now they're chanting all of this stuff and the guy comes out and tells me he wants
to talk to me.
He sits me down.
I'll never forget it.
It's one of the most beautiful things.
As I see a bowl of rice with chicken rice, I don't know, I was going to pull you.
I looked at it, and I said, damn, I'm going to take them up, but I'm still chasing the $5.
The guy tells me, this is the exact words that the guy told me.
He says, if you give me a year of your life, I guarantee you that God will restore you 100% and then more.
I said, damn, it's either the streets or I'm going to take this cat.
And when this guy makes me the next offer, I'm going to.
to jack him and I'm going to go to the pawn store and I'm going to go and run to the
shoe shine boy and he's going to sell me my dope and I'm run but something happened at that
instant Paul it transformed my life forever so forever I'm heading up to Chicago next week and I'm
going to go and talk about John 316 because it's not that particular scripture it's the meaning
behind it it's the unconditional love he says if you come and you stay here and every day at
six in the morning, you open the temple and you vacuum and you clean the toilets and you take the
trash, God will restore you. And I said, oh, boy, this is the biggest scam. I took him up on it.
I went to a ranch three days. They cleaned me up. Never seen human being so loving. They took me
into the shower. They bathed me. Knock and related. When Jesus washed the disciples' feet,
it just broke me down. I just started to cry and I said to myself,
I'm at. I'm out at Homestead three days into this mission on the third day.
Boom. The cat calls me back and says, look, listen, now I want you to stay here for real.
And every morning at 5 o'clock you get up to the altar and you pray.
I said, what am I going to pray for? It goes restoration.
I said, I'll try. If you teach me, I'll try.
So the component to success has to deal with giving yourself the opportunity.
So I gave myself the opportunity to choose between the street or that roof where it didn't rain
and I wasn't going to starve.
And I can get new clothes and clean clothes.
Pretty sure they came out of the goodwill.
God knows where they came from donations or anything.
All the Rolexes is, all the cars.
You're making all this money on a monthly basis.
You come from a housekeeper to cleaning toilets and you're, and this is not any better than what it is.
because now I feel like I've made a commitment, and I'm here, and how do I bail?
So on one of the nights, I decided to go to the basement.
And I go to the basement, and there's a studio, recording studio,
and I looked at the walls, and there were full of plaques.
It were all gold records.
And I looked at the name on the record, and it was just, the whole wall was full of these gold record.
I go, there's somebody here that's a musician.
This is a recording studio.
I'm going to rip off all these instruments or maybe that keyboard,
and I can probably score a $20 rock or whatever.
Whatever.
And every time I grab the guitar and every time I grab something
and I put it on the door,
I would want to take it and I would go around the block
and I would wind up in the same park a lot.
And that was the opportunity that I gave myself.
So we're all born with the same opportunity,
but the result cannot be the same.
So I gave myself the opportunity to listen to somebody
and humble myself.
And when I looked at the name,
I noticed he was a Puerto Rican salsa singer,
famous salsa singer.
And he took me under his belt,
and he made me an offer that transformed my life forever.
He said,
if you allow yourself
to allow God to redirect your life and put you
where you need to be
because the knowledge
that you've acquired in such a way,
a short time, just imagine if you do it for the kingdom of God. I said, this is a bunch of gibberish.
This is a bunch of storytelling. I'm not going to buy into this, but I'm going to give myself
the opportunity. And I started to look at failure at success. I started to look at all that situation
of hunger and smoking dope and being homeless as part of the successful story. And I took that leap
of faith and when that year clocked on I said well what am I doing now am I going to
seminary school he goes you're insane you're not going to become a pastor you're not
going to do none of that you're going back out there he says what do you need I said
well I need an apartment I need your car said buddy no apartment no cars you can come
back here and you can sleep in this side of the building they used to be called
winters there I made a couple are Albert and Carmen they fed me every day
every day. I used to go out to Flagler, grab the bus, and go out to make $7 an hour.
And I looked at the owner of that electrical company, and I said, damn, if you only know that I
can poke your eyes out with just my tongue, I can rip you up, I can do it 10 times better than
you. You're lousy at what you do.
And one day I'm walking into a Wendy's, so that's my favorite meal.
I don't care what it does to you. I'll always eat a Wendy's hamburger. Always, forever.
I think I had one, two, three days ago, forever.
And sitting down at the Wendy's restaurant, I heard a conversation
and I dropped into that conversation.
And that guy was talking about building.
He needed a builder.
And I knew what Vincent had showed me,
and I knew all of these components into the story,
and I wrote my phone number and my name on a napkin,
and three months later he called me.
Wow.
I had no idea that I was going to wind up in Little Haiti,
but now I'm in a $1,500 white Econa line van.
When it passed 30 miles, the front tires would shake.
I said, damn, this is not getting any better after being in a Bentley era.
I don't know.
There's something weird with this picture.
And I walked into a guy's life.
His name was Jerome.
And Jerome said, I'll sell you the lot for $1,500.
I'll hold the paper on it.
And when you're done with your project, you make me whole.
10% interest on the land.
It balloons in 12 months.
And I went back to my hero, my dad.
So my dad was a union delegator, had a lot of political connection.
A lot.
My dad was a very well-sought individual because he rattled people's cage.
If you wanted to become a commissioner in this particular area,
you'd go and get my dad, and he'd make it happen for you.
That's how much he pulled.
I went back to dad and I said, I need your friends from the building department.
I walked in with a set of plans.
So this individual that called me said 50% interest and 50% of the profits.
I said, I'll bite.
He said, I'll control the money.
I'll launch you.
And we're going to have a beautiful relationship.
And we did until the fourth house.
On the fourth house, I had stashed all my money in a launch box.
I still have the lunchbox.
It's a Barbie launch.
lunchbox and in there I stashed enough to buy the fifth lot and that fifth lot took me to a
thousand doors so I focused in neglected areas that particular scene took me to
focusing on why is this area neglected why is it that we identify success by the size of your
pocket and not the size of who is willing to dedicate a little bit of time of their life to
uplifting you. So I will never have the finances to compensate this human, this famous salsa
singer's name was Bobby Cruz. Wow. Shout out to Bobby. If you're forever, my friend,
or watching this, man. Yeah. So from there, what age did you get your fifth door, your fifth lot?
So in 2001, 2002, I started to build into Little Haiti.
By that time, I had already analyzed what it would take me to corner that particular market.
My passion, not knowing it, not giving me myself the opportunity,
is in giving access to those neglected because of,
whatever condition that they have, whatever demographic, whatever culture they come from.
I decided to use some of the contacts that my dad had left behind to giving access to homeownership.
Now I am into giving access to people for lack of funds, lack of credit, and I revolutionized
what the home ownership program was.
I found out that most of these people, nothing against them.
Most of these people that get parachuted that are executives hold a large sum of money in their financial institutions.
CRA money.
They don't like to disclose it.
It's for first-time buyers.
I walked into a bank in Coral Gables and I said, you know what?
I'm here to let you know that if you do not give me access to that, I'm going to the Miami Herald.
And I'm going to disclose those $30 million that the feds gave you for first-time buyers.
And I looked at homeownership with these eyes.
If you're going to give me a Section 8 voucher, $1,500, $1,500,
why don't we allocate that CRA money for first-time buyers?
So using these contacts, I wandered up at the building department again into community development.
And there we got access to community development money for the end user, not for me.
now I'm in my fifth house.
I've got a little bit of money.
I've hooked up with an amazing woman, the pillar of my life.
Wow.
The pillar.
Why would you call her the pillar of your life?
Because there's only two things in my life that have occurred throughout this whole story.
Jesus, because I come from an environment where I need to touch and feel to believe.
Now I've taken the leap of faith of buying into this story.
if you give me a year of your life.
Now I've bought into the story that God is going to restore you,
but they're not giving me the components of why somebody would allow themselves to be hung in that fashion.
What is the purpose behind that?
For me, I've identified it as unconditional love, meaning I'm going to do something for Paul,
but I don't expect nothing in return from Paul.
So I'm going to plant this boatload of seed that I'm getting capacitated
into people's lives that have just looked at inside of just because of the condition,
because either they smell bad, they look bad.
And people want to just reject them just because of their condition.
It's like we're going in society today through a situation of identity.
So when I was 10 years old before my dad poisoned me, honestly,
because he was the one that poisoned me with alcohol.
So I'm allergic to alcohol, so I'm not.
I don't condemn anything.
I just am allergic, so I don't want to be around it.
That's a choice I've made for the last 20-plus years.
I've recognized that I'm allergic to it, same I'm allergic to cocaine.
I'm allergic to certain components in my life that I've got to steep people away.
So now I've identified that the worst enemy is me.
So I've got to get grip of this.
So I'm into this whole situation.
I'm building these houses.
I've got three or four houses under my belt.
I've got a little bit of cash and I walk into a dealership and I buy a jag.
I'm in a jag again.
It's a little bit up.
It's not a good little bit of it's a jag.
So I'm going down to Palmetto and I see this.
blonde chick. And there goes the old William and roll down the window and start chonking the horn.
Start asking this chick for the phone number. She's rejecting me. She's a resistance. So I throw the
jag and I pulled her over. And I'm in the middle of Palmetto, I bumper to bumper and I reached
over and I asked her for her number and he listened to out. No number. So I gave her and I dumped it
into her seat. Wrote in a paper, dumped it in her seat. And she called. One of the
of the things that was magical for me in selecting. So that's another thing that I found in my life
that choosing is of key component. It's an instrument that we use on who you sit and dine with
and which fights to pick. So I'm selective in those aspects. I select who I want to sit and talk
to and I select what fights I want to pick. So I'm very selective. I love that. So back in our
days in Key Biscayne, we've got a strip of big pine trees there. And people go there to raise the
temperature and get kiss and do all this kind of thing. And I'm taking this chick. Maria, the love of my
life. Oh my God, Maria. Wow. And I'm talking to Maria. And the first thing that crosses my mind is that
I've been in a situation without a relationship for a year. So I've done that sacrifice so that I can
redirect my life and taking somebody up, I want to call him my mentor with not so many words.
I want to call him somebody that gave me what I call agape, which is the unconditional love of
God, which is not expecting anything in return.
He said, when you get back on your feet, I'm not even going to want nor the mops, nor the brooms in
your closet.
And I said, whoa, mind-blowing.
This is a ministry.
Most of these ministries are in for the cash.
this guy's a movie star this guy's a salsa singer this guy has really surrendered his career
breached the contract in that label to serve and to go and serve humans and preach the gospel
and what do you know i'm there talking to maria and i can just feel the holy spirit just ministering to
me and tells me talk to her about me and i said talk to her about who and i gave her my testimony
And when I started to tell her where I had come from, she started to cry.
And I asked her the question again a few days ago,
what allowed you to use those specific lenses to see a little bit further in my life
than what you actually were looking at?
You were looking at somebody that was getting off again.
And I invited her to a party.
Parties on Sunday.
It's at 11 o'clock in the morning.
It's going to church.
So we went to church.
I usually get down and I meditate a little bit and I pray and I thank God for this particular experience.
And when I looked up, she had her hands raised at God.
And she was praising God and I said, this is the chick.
She's the one?
She's still the one.
I took her to an auction, tax deed because I bought a lot of tax deeds.
And I told her, let's go to the auction.
You've never been to the auction.
I took her to the tax deed auction.
And on the top floor was the place where you.
get marriage and applied for a marriage lesson. I says, this is the opportunity of your life.
Let's get married now until this day. I've been married with Maria.
Very happily married. How many years? So I've got Maria since 2002, 2003.
So. Yeah. So about 23 years? My man.
Beautiful, beautiful relationship. There's no secrets. Very transparent, knows everything.
So there's nothing that anybody can go to Maria and say, look, listen, we know this about William because she
knows it all. So that helps a lot.
Yeah. 23 years of marriage. Man, that's a beautiful thing, brother.
Beautiful.
All right. And then now you were able to go ahead and rebuild yourself again.
And you're on your path to building these thousand doors.
Anything in between that you think you could think of that happened, that dramatically changed everything for you.
Did you get into any critical incidents?
Did something in your life shifted or did you hit a milestone?
No, it's basically what it is is the understanding of the hump.
So I'm always going to be an ambassador of that particular scene.
It's got to do a lot with my faith.
So my hero of the faith talks about that all moments of tribulations are momentarily.
They don't last forever.
They're momentarily.
They're there for a purpose.
the end of the day produces glory so I know that when I'm on the hump I just got to be
cautious because the hump is a very tricky place to play the hump is there's so
much there's so much treasures in the hump the hump allows you to to look from the
top down to see what the surroundings what took you to the hump the people have a
misunderstanding of what crashing and burnings crashing and burn is one of the most
beautiful things that has happened in my life that's where I got my strength
from I didn't get my strength from being successful
I got my strength of crashing and burning.
Obviously, my crash and burn was catastrophic for my life
because it put me in a particular situation,
which I'm grateful for that.
But all dynamics, all situations that do occur, Paul in my life
have a purpose.
It's all purpose-driven.
I don't find myself with the largest.
So I lost my hero on earth, which was my dad,
that, you know, you want to look at,
You want to look at your parents as these individuals.
For some, they're good people and for others.
They're evil.
For me, my dad was an evil human being because I didn't understand him as a communicator.
So for years, just because he was a bad communicator doesn't mean that the message was wrong
or the message was it wasn't the truth.
You just, you rebel against that and you, you know, you twist it to benefit you because
everybody wants to tell the story as to you want others to view it. No, the more transparent
you are in the hump, the better it is you're, you know, you have control how long you're
going to be in that hump. It's your personality, it's the me factor that doesn't allow you
to leave that hump. For me, it was like, how catastrophic can it be if I was nowhere and then
up on the hill and then boom, you're back on the ground and even worse, you're less than zero.
you have to understand that the foundation starts under the earth.
If you don't find firmness, if you don't bore and find rock,
you're not going to be solid. You're going to be always shifting.
So the hump is always going to be full of springs in the bottom.
You're always going to be shaking.
Watch it when you think you're firm because you're going to fall and hurt yourself.
What is that catastrophic scene does for me?
It gives me the opportunity to view and allow me the opportunity to say,
what got me here, stop, think, how do I wiggle out of this situation versus allowing my emotions
that don't edify? My emotions don't do anything for me. It's just distort. It's a phantom.
It's a figment of my imagination. It will last a fraction of a second. Disappears. The emotion is
gone. I don't, I don't, my life doesn't revolve around that particular scene. What happens is
you tell a story as transparent as you can with the evidence that overlays the result. If there is
result there's no evidence of a result it's not a good story you're right it's a
make it up story it's like harvey the rabbit it's a figment of your imagination it doesn't
list boom you made it up and that's it no you need the evidence when i go and speak i need somebody
in the audience because you're always going to have somebody question it get up raise
question it there's the evidence right there so it always turns the pillar my wife she's
seen it she's heard it from others you testify you raise the dead that's the evidence it impacts
That's the message.
Yeah.
So what happens is I encounter this relationship with this woman
that I'm thinking with my emotions as this is going to take off the temperature.
Here she's a pillar.
Now we're going to start this venture in neglected areas
and we're going to start helping people that are categorized, neglected,
marginalized.
They're being labeled.
So let me toss this whole picture around and let me recreate this program.
So I'm going to get you in with subsidiary money, the ones that you guys want to use to bail out.
And I want to make you a homeowner instead of being you a tenant.
Yeah.
So I revolutionized that industry and I impacted neighborhoods.
And now they've turned out to be amazing neighborhoods.
There's a beautiful picture.
I love that.
I love that.
Beautiful.
Impacting just human beings, that's what I'm in it for,
because all it took us was somebody to give me that unconditional love.
I'll tell you the story again, quick.
I don't want the brooms or the mops in your closet.
All I want to use you as a testimony that I planted this seed in your life
and look how you shine.
That's nothing in return.
Just imagine how much he shines, and people don't realize.
It's like when you walk into a room,
you can just look and scan and you can tell who's who that's revelation that's
discernment that comes from from the spirit you know it's like if I want to get
into your pocket if I and I can tell the loudest one is the weakest point in the
room you know I can rattle your cage all day long because I have not lost the
knowledge what I've done is I've turned the tools that are given to me one of the
tools that has been very important in my life is what happened when I was a
little kid when I was molested. That was one of the things that impacted me the most of not having
any adult figure, mom and dad, to talk about that. Yeah, it's huge. Yeah, so I'm writing a book,
and I was just telling somebody about that book. It's just like, I built a school in 1990 to help
my dad with a vision to serve the community, and I just bought into them. I bought them back,
and I closed them down. I remodeled them, and I just opened them back.
And these particular schools are packed to capacity.
But what's interesting in that book, it was missing that particular phase.
So it all starts at your childhood.
I know for a fact that everybody is born with an opportunity,
but the result cannot all be the same.
So now I'm looking into childhood behavior.
So for the past 15 years, I've been looking at supporting ministries
or being part of, I feed 650 kids a day in Honduras.
What attracted me to Honduras an invite.
I go to Oropoli.
It's on the border of Nicaragua, human trafficking.
What they do to these kids?
How they prostitute them?
How do you feel when they tie you to a chair and they touch you
and you don't have no one to go to?
Yeah.
Then you have an identity problem.
So I've used that hump to define who I really am today.
Obviously my vision that's given by God to me
is not financially few, so I don't do it.
I've got plenty of money to do that.
So I serve humans for the benefit of just one investment that was done on me.
They planted a seed, reaped, so, and I communicate the same effect to humans.
I help kids.
Now I'm involved with kids.
I've got two schools in the Winwood area, Winwood Daycare, that obviously that particular scene is attracting kids that are in bad situation.
I'm dealing with DCF.
Yeah.
A misplaced child, parents that are abusing their children.
So I've just scholarship a bunch of kids to bring them in, free of charge.
I'll fund it myself.
At the end of the day, it's like, why is my right hand going to know what my left hand does?
I'm not in it for the money.
I've got plenty of that where that came from.
So why not reinvested into that, into humans?
So I'm here to impact.
So nothing's really shifted.
but I've learned that even though Wall Street does make a lot of people wealthy and healthy,
the kingdom for me in helping humans has a better result percentage-wise.
I'm here to impact.
I travel out of my pocket.
I speak out of my pocket.
I want nothing in return.
It's a model based on a crusade that I went.
Another individual that called me, it was 2,500 people called me from the stage and said,
you with the white cap, you with the white cap, I'm hiding there.
I go up to the front of the gun, the guy tells me, look, listen, I know for a fact that God will restore you,
but when God restores you, he's going to call you back in.
So I'm receptive.
I've given my opportunity that I've gotten more out of helping others because the evidence there.
And I've got anything and everything that a human could want.
It's just that I'm in a phase of my life where I only want what I need, not satisfaction of my wants.
I like the cars.
I like the houses.
I like all that I like.
But it's not a priority anymore.
That's not a task.
The task is perforating those fallen men.
So I've decided to dedicate my life to helping others.
I love that, man.
I love that.
And what are your future plans for helping the community and, you know, helping other people in the organizations?
I've encountered a situation with DCF.
There's a lot of misplaced children.
I was telling the story earlier today.
I just got approached by DCF, Department of Children and Family.
There's an Amber Alert that's about two weeks old.
Guy stabs the mom.
They're doped out.
They're working out of a dope.
He stabs the mom, takes the kid, goes down 995 north.
Helicopters chasing him.
There's an Amber Alert, boom.
She shows up at my place.
tells me about this little kid.
She goes, do you know about the story?
I'm not familiar.
I don't really keep in touch with those things.
Well, one thing links to the other.
She calls another DCF police.
So they're actually the police.
They're just into extracting kids
from dysfunctional homes.
Abuse, sexual abuse.
So I'm very heavily into that.
She starts telling me the story,
and I tell her, look, listen,
the building next door is open.
The building next door is going to go
under a massive remodel, can I give you a space?
She goes, well, I've got 500 cases.
So now that door swung open.
So now I'm going to start working with kids that are misplaced
because I hate the fact of foster homes.
Future plans stay with the Honduras ministry.
The human trafficking portion gives me a little bit of acid indigestion.
I don't like the concept.
I understand more of the child development stage.
because I gave myself the opportunity to look at that aspect,
that where it starts.
And believe me, I can actually look at a kid and tell you what's going on at home.
The abuse.
I see them all the time with the makeup.
I have to deal with that on a daily basis.
So I've given myself that opportunity to launch a massive campaign,
weave myself into humans that are representing that sector.
That's powerful.
When I go to Honduras, I mean, it's really.
rural. I'm right in the path of this place where all these people are trafficked and in those things,
you see a lot of women that are taken from there for prostitution. You see a lot of kids that are
taken snatch that are used for the sex industry. And it takes me back to that walking cooler where
the butcher at that store where I worked as a stock boy for $25 a week would tie me up and
touch me in a walking cooler and I didn't have anybody to go to. So that impacted me.
and it's a chapter in my life that I'm very expressive.
I express myself.
I'm telling you it raises the dead because I go to these places
and it's the parent that's with the child in the community
and I'm talking to the parent.
And I know for a fact that when you drink that half a bottle of rum,
you're touching your child and you're crying and you're molesting your child.
And that has impacted my life in such a positive way.
that I've decided that my wealth will get buried into that.
This is not a financially stimulated thing.
I've made a commitment with God and my wife that it will stay in that environment.
Result, I have a daughter, Alex.
She's an attorney.
Very smart.
Now look at the story, how dysfunctional is, and look at the result.
as to how the love has catered to allow her the opportunity to be a successful lawyer.
Beautiful wife.
So the result can be modeled in the eyes of the communities and the public that's being neglected.
You're just not giving your time and the opportunity to feed this hungry community of the possibilities
that you can get out of that rut you're in.
And I've decided that that's a fight I want to pick.
So I picked it.
Is it hard?
Yes.
Yes.
I never thought that.
Being a man of faith, being a man of an advocate of the gospel or preaching
of love, what's going to be easy.
I thought it was going to be hunk of door.
I thought it was, hey, listen, the negative died.
It's going to be a breeze.
No, it just got narrow and spinyer and bumpier.
It's like, wow, how much tolerant can you be to being in these places where all these kids,
all these humans are destroying themselves.
How can you neglect people?
You know, this is around four in Chicago
because there's a lot of need in Chicago
and I was invited out to Chicago.
But sometimes we tend to walk through this avenue
and there's a diamond in the rut.
But we don't know what potential is that diamond
when you polish it.
Here it is in front of you, Paul.
Paul, I was trash and garbage.
Stunk like a dog.
You weren't sorry for the dogs.
I stunk three days smoking fuck cocaine
How can you smell? I mean you smell like chemicals
You don't brush your teeth you don't bathe
And somebody sat with me and said if you give me a year of your life. I can do this
So I bought a ranch
I fund places that feed
That's what take that took me to Southeast Asia because I wanted to know
I go to a I've been for
five times to New Delhi. In New Delhi, people want to fight about denominations of faith and stuff
like that. I go to a place that feeds 350,000 people a day, buddy, their sheiks. That's a wow.
300 for free, 350,000 people a day. Just imagine. Just imagine feeding 650,000 kids for pennies. What does
that do? I just bought about 10,000.
a thousand thermal to the thermometers to ship them out pennies ship them out with batteries what an
impact a thousand backpacks 500 pairs of sneakers every November 100 200 200 bicycles
because they've never seen that what does that do for me it grew my wealth growth it's the
best return people talk about interest rate people talk about their returns on hedges
and somebody.
This particular action has a return
that'll blow your mind.
It's not grabbing to go broke, no.
It's knowing how to allocate value
to what matters.
So if that makes any sense,
the return is huge.
For me, it has been.
Fulfillment.
Fulfillment's everything in life, man.
You know, I've been there
where material things does not do anything for me anymore.
So at the end of the day,
you do have to find your fulfillment.
You have to be passionate about
what you want for yourself in the future.
And if that brings you fulfillment, brother, because it, you know, it builds you up,
especially from coming from a hard place like you have, dude, that's what I'm talking about, brother.
So at the end of the day, it's that type of investment.
What do you sit with somebody and talk to them that can transform?
We're sitting with a cat about a month ago.
He says, I have an intimate relationship with my bathroom.
I lean on the tile.
I take all my clothes and my bed is my toilet.
But I take my wife does a lot of collecting with clothes.
We ship them out to South America.
I mean, a lot of clothes.
She washes them and irons them.
And I live in a unique place surrounded by saltwater.
So that tells you how humble we are in that aspect.
And it's not flashing or wanting any credit for it.
But the guy just tells me, but listen,
if it wasn't for this particular moment,
I was about to put a bullet in my head.
And I said to myself, wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
So that moves me.
everything else.
No.
Yeah.
I'll pass.
I'm in for that, buddy.
Yeah.
I'm in for the long haul.
That's good, man.
You found peace, man.
You found peace and you're enjoying life.
You're, you know what I always say?
Living life by design, man.
You're living life by design now.
I love it.
You know, you're living with your core values and what you believe in.
And that's a powerful thing, man.
So what would you say for the listeners and the viewers that are listening to this right now?
How do they find their purpose?
I think when the vision gets distorted out of anxiety or out of emotions, it's just stopping and giving yourself the opportunity like I did.
I gave myself the opportunity to just look for a minute and see what actually had value.
Did I want to stay in that situation?
Or did I, I'm in this situation, but I have not given myself the opportunity to reach out to somebody that can help me.
at the end of the day, it has to do with giving yourself the opportunity to stop and think for a minute.
Is this where I need to be?
Is this my calling?
Is this what I'm all about?
And that defines a lot.
It gives you a better understanding.
It's called the hump.
Anybody that's got a distorted vision, it's like I said, I used to be blind now.
I can see the message really has to be with giving yourself the opportunity.
You have to give yourself the opportunity.
without prejudice, without, see,
see, Paul, the opinion,
the opinion of others doesn't define the final product.
Who defines the final product?
It's the designer, it's God himself.
It's giving yourself, looking at yourself in the mirror,
taking an inventory, is this where I wanted to be?
I looked in the mirror and I said,
do I want to be with a glass pipe?
Do I want to be a millionaire again?
And if I do want to be a millionaire again,
what am I going to do with it?
am I going to buy 20 cars?
By the way, I like cars.
I love cars.
But that has nothing to do,
or it doesn't interfere with my calling.
My calling is something that I've recognized
that has to do with defining what my purpose is.
And when you look in the mirror and you take an inventory,
you look at where you are now and where you want to be.
I designed it.
It's tailored.
It's like going and getting my suit tailor.
I designed it. I don't want to be here anymore. That's not what's called the purpose. I want to be here. Do I want to be
wealthy? Yes. What am I going to do with my wealth? I'm going to do the same thing that they did with me.
I'm going to inject it back into the kingdom where I know it's going to edify and uplift others.
How is the return? Am I going to go broke by doing that? Well, let's give it a shot. So I gave myself the
opportunity. And the more I injected into that, tell you a long story, show you.
The reason why I like Wendy's is because one night I was hungry and a guy by the name of Frank approached me.
And I said, Frank, I'm hungry.
I was already living at the church.
And Frank approached me and bought me a Wendy's hamburger.
So I'm always going to eat that Wendy's hamburger.
Thanks for Dave.
Frank, after many years in recovery, after many years in ministry, he's going through an accident.
His house burns down no insurance.
And the only thing that I could cross my mind is that day when he fed me that double-stack burger,
and he had the opportunity to sit and talk to me.
And when Frank identified that it was in a Miami Springs hotel with his children,
I could always remember that hamburger.
And I said, it took probably $10 for me to look at that case.
And I looked at it and I said, I'll build it for you.
He says, yeah, but I got no insurance or I got no money.
So an $8 or $10 investment moved my heart to building him a brand new house and telling him,
hear the keys.
So does it have a return?
That was his investment.
So what's my investment?
The opportunity that I gave myself to look at life, that the knowledge of building a thousand units and becoming a multi-whatever,
because we know that if we built 1,000 units, you know that the numbers are huge.
What does that do for me?
Am I going to give it back?
Am I going to leave it behind?
Am I going to find a truck big enough to take it to the grave with me?
Am I just going to live it, give it to my daughter?
Because my daughter is a lawyer.
She doesn't need the funds.
She's well off.
So what am I going to do?
I'm going to invest it in humans.
So at the end of the day, what are the returns?
The fulfillment, the transformation.
What transforms I can look at somebody that I went to Chicago
three weeks ago that was sleeping in its four-wheel rubber,
condo and actually grabbed them and said, here, going where yourself an apartment.
Now he lives in an apartment.
Now he's furnished.
The same thing was done to me.
So why not do it to others?
So is the investment in Wall Street healthy?
Yeah, it's beautiful.
The return is beautiful.
The money is beautiful.
But it didn't take me out of the hump.
That's one thing it could not solve.
The richest, the wealthiest could not bail me out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It took time and word of wisdom to give me the opportunity to look and take an inventory and say to myself,
this is not where I want to be.
So if there's something that I'm going to tell you, stop, think, and give yourself the opportunity.
That's the biggest leap of faith you can take.
That's powerful, man.
That's what we call the level up, guys.
Will, where can my audience find you, brother?
So one of my conditions in my walk is that because of my personality, I didn't want.
want to be nor invited financially motivated and I didn't want to become a superstar so
that's got that component it's just that unfortunately an age we declined so I've been around the
world we've traveled southeast days over five times so we've done a lot of crusades around the
world and as time is declined I've looked at this possibility of this particular scene
so I've created a room with the missing components I own two schools
I've got an email.
I know that if I were to sell my story, I can become a superstar.
And there, I'll crash and burn again.
So I'm not going to do that.
I don't want to become a superstar.
Have I thought about creating something to give me more exposure?
I've given myself the opportunity to explore that because being a dinosaur
and wanting to have human interaction at a physical level has limit that.
Yes, I got an email.
You can expose you.
You got a phone number.
I will expose that.
I'm a 24-hour dynamic human being.
I'm always out to serve human beings.
I own two schools in the Alapado-Winwood community.
It's Winwood Daycare.
Paul, you can publish my email if you want.
I would love that because if it's got to do with helping others.
But I've always been humble enough not to want to become a phone.
a movie star. I don't want to become a movie star because of what I've seen in miraculous ways,
how I've been able to fuel my vision without having to receive anything in return. That's the
unconditional love. The part that I struggled with a lot. Unconditional love is something that you give
and don't expect anything in return, so I struggled a lot with that because you're out in the
business and the secular world wanting to buy real estate and get money in return. And
that's all fine and dandy i love it it's beautiful but this particular sector of my life
is planting seeds in people's life and the return it's a transformation so paul you can
expose my email i mean i've already said the windwood daycare you can go winwooddaycare dot com
send me an email if you want all you can publish my number that's going to blow up we'll do i love
it i love it but um yeah i've limited myself to that i love that i love that living life by design
we got will over here guys from going through adversity at the age of 17 starting construction
guys to transitioning from construction to then going ahead and investing in real estate at 21 to 22
to lose it at all and then to gain him back again now to go ahead and actually find his fulfillment
which is helping others building schools and giving back to the community and his faith shout out to
your wife maria she's a jam dude 23 years of experience much much respect brother this is i'm a year
and a half into marriage.
About to have my first son.
Beautiful.
So it's a beautiful thing, man.
I'm excited.
But with that being said, guys, if you guys enjoyed this episode and you guys actually want
to get a hold of Will, I'm going to go ahead and drop his email down in the description
below.
Make sure to go ahead and check in with him.
He's based out of here at Miami.
He's a wonderful man, wonderful story.
And it's going to inspire literally millions of people throughout our channels and our
platforms.
With that being said, guys, we are currently top three in all categories on Apple Podcasts and
currently number one in business because of you guys.
I want to thank you guys, okay?
We are here to serve and to help you guys level up every single day.
Make sure to leave a five-star review on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and on YouTube, guys.
We are here to level you up.
This is Paul Alex, the Level Up podcast.
We'll catch you on the next one.
Peace.
If you care about your digital safety, you should know what's happening behind the headlines.
Hi, it's Leo Leport here.
And each week on Security Now, Steve Gibson and I explain what's happening in the world of digital
security, threats, reaches, clever hacks, and the policies that affect all of us. We take the complex
and make it understandable. If you want to stay safe and informed, this is your show. Every Tuesday at
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