PART 1 of 2
By Marilyn M. Barnewall
June 13, 2010
NewsWithViews.com
I’m going to share APES with you.
No swinging through the trees or
grunting or scratching hairy chests (or anything else) is required. APES does
not live in a jungle or a zoo. It’s a Syndrome. I got to name it because I
discovered it in the 1980s: The Active Passive Energy Syndrome (APES).
While a banker and later a bank
consultant, I for 20-years researched what was supposed to be a banking topic
(and it was) and found answers to many of life’s questions that don’t involve
business and finance. APES is both complex and difficult. Its greatest danger
lies in what appears to be its common sense simplicity. Because of its subtle
complexity, people think they “get” it far sooner than is possible. At various
stages along the research path, I thought I got it, too – only to find the path
led much further than I realized.
It will take over a page of
definitions to make it possible for readers to follow research results. It’s
one reason I don’t discuss APES in articles. I encourage you to read on because
APES explains why your country is being torn asunder. Actually, the explanation
is quite simple – once you understand the terminology that emerged from 20 years
of data.
The terms “Active Investor” and
“Passive Investor” came from this research (so does another term I coined,
“upscale”). The original research design was to determine what motivates
affluent, successful people to make investment decisions. It achieved that –
but don’t stop reading because you’re not a major investor. All human beings
are investors… in life. That’s what APES discovered.
The research proved that all human
investments are motivated by two basic human needs, regardless of
socio-economic status. The word “investor,” the data told me, refers to
financial investments, but the same motivators also influence buying a pound of
bacon – or, spending time, energy or money on any endeavor. Whenever time,
energy or money is spent, it’s an investment – marriage, children, career,
study, currency, stocks and bonds – political views – are all investments.
Thus, all people invest.
This “project” taught me the
importance of definitional clarity of words – and the dangers of no clarity.
Those who are regular readers know I’ve written about this important subject.
I’ve also written about the importance of identifying the difference between
issues and problems.
Now you know why. Both are valuable lessons I learned from
this long-term endeavor.
How easily we are misled when we do
not have a firm understanding of the words we (and others) use! How easily we
are diverted from real problem solving when we allow our thoughts to be
absorbed by issues. Issues can’t be solved. Problems can. Americans are focused
on issues, not problems. It’s why I decided to talk about APES.
As an aside, the research results
were published by the American Bankers Association and sold to American bankers
for $5,000 per copy. Lafferty Publications (London/Dublin) then contracted with
me to sell the book worldwide. The research has never been challenged and the
programs implemented using it were and are successful.
We need a quick definition of
“wealth.” Wealth, for the purposes of this study, has little to do with money
and everything to do with character. Money may make wealth more fun, but
wealth, as referred to herein, is character. Please understand that these
definitions didn’t come from me, but from the research. I resisted but they
kept hitting me over the head until I understood what was being said.
What do “Active” and “Passive” mean?
Actives come by wealth (character)
by actively managing the risk of their own assets (assets include time, sweat,
and tears). When we manage our own assets, we must demand the right to control
the risks we take – or, we foolishly play someone else’s game and let them make
the rules as the game progresses – a good way to lose in any endeavor.
Passives come by wealth… well,
passively (with minimum personal risk). They risk the assets of other people to
gain wealth (including character) or, they inherit it. In the financial world,
they risk the funds of stockholders, partners, taxpayers, and other funding
sources outside of themselves. In other endeavors, they risk other people’s
time, sweat and tears and all of the physical, emotional and spiritual strength
supporting each.
If you understand Passives are
liberal and Actives are conservative, it makes clear the total lack of current
political understanding about managing business risk and why people aren’t
responding to all of the cash being thrown into the marketplace. Passives do
not understand risk management – they think “risk taking” and “risk management”
are synonymous – they are not. Government, run by Passive Liberals, decided it
will tell businesses which risks it must take and when and how to take them.
Businesses (especially independents) aren’t buying it – nor should they. Big
businesses are run by Passive liberals who cede to group demands. Independent
businesses that employ a large majority of Americans are run by Active
conservatives who will not.
Research results clearly show there
are two basic motivators in life: Power and control. Though erroneously used
interchangeably, they are not the same thing.
Control happens internally – is
exercised over self. Power happens externally – is exercised over others.
We are used to hearing things like
“Government is trying to control inflation.” A more accurate statement is that
government (or the Federal Reserve System) is exercising power over monetary policy
to contain inflation. It is impossible to “control” that over which one has no
“power.”
If a complete stranger comes to your
door and demands you come outside and wash his car, most people will close the
door in his face (before calling the police). A stranger who holds no power
over you cannot demand anything of you. If he brandishes a weapon or comes to
your door with a knife at the throat of your next door neighbor, he holds power
over you. He can “control” your behavior through an exercise of “power.”
Control and power are very
different.
The driving force of Active
conservatives is control. The driving force of Passive liberals is power. Not
only is the meaning of the words different, so are the people motivated by one
or the other.
Example: Liberals, motivated by
power, are drawn to politics, the greatest circus tent for power clowns in the
world. Conservatives, motivated by control, are not attracted to power-dominant
professions. They mostly seek to control their own destiny. They avoid the power
politics at major corporations – and in government. Power politics involves
exercising power over others in an “acceptable” manner. When liberals dominate
society, political correctness does, too. Conservatives avoid becoming
politicians. They do not enjoy exercising power over others. They will fight to
keep others from exercising it over them.
Why are liberals motivated by power?
Why are conservatives motivated by control?
Children, based on their early
environment, inwardly determine their risk management skills. They learn fight
or flight on the basis of personal prices paid for putting their toes in the
water of risk management. Some people manage risk well and others do not. Some
people emerge from childhood secure, others emerge insecure.
Who needs power more, a secure or an
insecure person? An insecure person needs power (or access to it) just as
children need adults to check under the bed – to get rid of unseen threats and
gremlins.
I coined the term “Passive Investor”
to describe people motivated by power. The word “Passive” refers only to this
group’s adverse reaction to risk management. It does NOT define personalities.
Passives are often strong, dynamic people – almost all politicians from the
President on down are Passives. So, too, are almost all corporate executives
(including dynamic guys like Lee Iacocca).
Why are so many politicians of both
political parties Passive? Actives aren’t attracted to positions of power.
Passives are. It has little to do with the terms “Republican” and “Democrat.”
All those words tell you is that Republicans (like most corporate executives)
are fiscal conservatives and Democrats are fiscal liberals.
Why are there so many abuses of
power when Passives (liberals) control things? When something is an integral
part of the personality, there is always an equal and an opposite element
present. For Passives, there is always respect for and abuse of power. For
Actives, there is always respect for and lack of respect for others relative to
individualist control of self destiny.
Actives/conservatives need to
control risks because only fools take risks on playing fields they do not
control. Actives don’t take risks, they manage them. Conservatives are not
attracted to careers at major corporations and other large institutions like
government because of the power politics played. They are America’s shopkeepers
and risk-managing independent business owners.
Why do Passives/Liberals so hate
capitalism? Capitalism is an economic system requiring the management of risk.
There is a big difference between managing risks and taking them – but Passives
have little understanding of risk management. Actives manage risks, Passives
view risk as something to be taken (and avoided).
Why are Liberals so attracted to
socialism/communism? They are forms of government that promise to assume all of
life’s risks. That sounds like a sweet deal to an insecure person drawn to
power like a magnet.
Why are the supporters of
capitalism, Actives/Conservatives, so committed to freedom and the economic
system that makes it possible? Without freedom there is no control of self
destiny.
If you confuse risk management with
risk taking, you may think Wall Street’s boys must be Actives. “Look at the
risks they take!” Actives do not take risks. They manage them. What’s the
difference? Control. Do Wall Street brokers control the risks they take? Only
at executive management levels – and they are playing with OPM (other people’s
money), not their own – typical Passive behavior.
To Passives, big equals powerful
which equals safe. They invest in and work for big companies. Big and
Passive/Market investors go together like water and rain. Actives primarily
invest in themselves, not the stock market over which they have no control.
Passives find “big” safe – at educational institutions, labor unions,
government, businesses, banks, media, airlines – and brokerage firms. So, now
you know why our schools were overtaken by security-driven Passives who are
risk management averse: Teacher = Power. School=Big=Safe.
The power to which Passives are
attracted provides protective-like security that removes the need to manage
risk.
I told you it’s a complicated
subject. It still fascinates me. So far, we’ve covered about 1/1000th of the
many ways in which APES can be applied.
Article Two discusses additional
behavior modes of these two groups. For part two click below.
(c) 2010 Marilyn M. Barnewall - All
Rights Reserved
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