Kevin Palmer Phoenix AZ. | Kevin J Palmer Scottsdale http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com Champion of Financial Justice Fri, 25 Mar 2022 18:06:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.7 Smart People Prosper http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2022/03/17/smart-people-prosper/ Thu, 17 Mar 2022 15:21:12 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1450 Having a black-and-white opinion makes people an easy fit for a world view of either communism or capitalism. In either case smart people prosper in most any situation with stability. America is mostly immune to world crisis and we have the luxury of safety and speculation from the sidelines but Read more…

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smart people prosperHaving a black-and-white opinion makes people an easy fit for a world view of either communism or capitalism. In either case smart people prosper in most any situation with stability.

America is mostly immune to world crisis and we have the luxury of safety and speculation from the sidelines but Sunday morning quarterbacking won’t protect anyone.

Liquidity in capital markets is drying up and may lead to market malfunctions. Russian crypto currency wallets are filling to 40 million dollars each as money moves out of our US treasures.

Cyber-attacks by “anonymous” against the Russians are quietly condoned by the same American leaders who called out similar attacks by Russia against us last year.

Embargos mean less oil to us which means more drilling and environmental damage in our backyard and it will go deeper, so to speak.

The best way for this War to end, is quickly regardless of who wins. Right now, the world is on fire so beware of being sucked into anybody’s agenda.

SMA Institute

 

 

Palmer Private Equity, is rooted in Kevin’s Behavioral Economic Research that once set standards for Wall Street brokerage firms. It is now run by Kevin & Gretchen both formally trained at NYSE traded corporations. Its Philanthropic entity invests for the public good in the family’s nonprofit. Kevin is a Financial Freedom Fighter, who as an epigrammatic writer illustrates  how emotional intelligence leads to decision processes that enable economic dignity & improves quality of life. He published two books as well as numerous articles and blogs on economic and financially related topics and his third book will be out in 2023. Kevin has also had radio appearances on NPR’s Market Place, NPR affiliate KJZZ-FM, KXTZ-FM, as well as television appearances on KPNX-TV, KVVU-TV5, KNXV-TV. He currently resides in Scottsdale, AZ

“Peace through Prosperity” projects to challenge Injustices through Self-empowerment.
Kevin Palmer writer-rebel-producer-poet http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer Arizona http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer www.thequietrich.com

Author Kevin Palmer http://reawakeninganamericandream.com 

Kevin Palmer Arizona www.smainstitute.com

Kevin Palmer Phoenix www.kevinpalmerscottsdale.com

 

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Wasted Capacity Utilization at Major Colleges http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2022/02/02/wasted-capacity-utilization-at-major-colleges/ Wed, 02 Feb 2022 18:19:54 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1430 Because of Covid restrictions, expansive equipment at major colleges and universities, goes unused. Covid, myth or monster, has taken big bite out of lives. Over 300,000 jobs unexpectedly lost in January—the expectation was for a net gain. The obsequiousness of it all is getting hard to justify. Major drug store Read more…

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Because of Covid restrictions, expansive equipment at major colleges and universities, goes unused.

Covid, myth or monster, has taken big bite out of lives. Over 300,000 jobs unexpectedly lost in January—the expectation was for a net gain.

The obsequiousness of it all is getting hard to justify.

Major drug store chains who advocated Covid protocols for profits recently closed drive-thru windows to save money.

Now customers huddle together on lines inside stores, conforming hypocrisies of self-serving mega institutions.

 

 

 

 

 

I saw the writing on wall, when the first non-broker trained CEO was appointed at MERRILL LYNCH. My boss, who answered directly to that CEO, said to me after first meeting him, “…some people make bold moves to climb to the top. Others hide behind them so they don’t get shot in hopes of reaping spoils, if others fail. Time to take the severance package before this ship blows itself up…” I requested mine to be finalized on May 8th the day Joan of Arc liberated Paris in 1429. Not long after, two executives and I were advising other firms on how to be better Broker-Dealers. Four months almost to the day, on what would have been my usual quarterly visit to Merrill Lynch headquarters in New York City. The Twin Towers were attacked. Seven years later my old firm MERRILL LYNCH collapsed under subprime and credit default swap mistakes. The rest of the financial markets and the country’s economy followed.

Author and Journalist Kevin Palmer strategicmanagementadvisors.com

SMA Institute Kevin Palmer http://KevinJPalmer.com

Kevin Palmer discharged http://KevinPalmerArizona.com

Wealth Expert Kevin Palmer http://KevinJPalmer.com 

Hidden secrets first-time millionaires have used to gain abundance https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LE_vB0e6akg&feature=youtu.be

 

 

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Encore Performance Published November 24, 2020 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/11/23/encore-performance-published-november-24-2020/ Tue, 23 Nov 2021 15:31:05 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1412 Might have died near that granite boulder on which they stepped, if not for an “Indian”, named Squanto Most of us recall, from fourth grade, that our Pilgrim Fathers were so grateful for having safely reached their destination in 1620, they gave thanks with a noble feast. Today, we reenact Read more…

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Might have died near that granite boulder on which they stepped, if not for an “Indian”, named Squanto

Most of us recall, from fourth grade, that our Pilgrim Fathers were so grateful for having safely reached their destination in 1620, they gave thanks with a noble feast. Today, we reenact that event every fourth Thursday of November, which to some is also known as the most dysfunctional family day of the year.

During this horrific, ‘er I mean, historic year of 2020, you may be traveling down the hall to the kitchen, rather than across the country but will likely navigate to a table with turkey, pies and all the dressings. Traffic slowdowns or hallway accidents aside, you will do better than the Pilgrims, who ended up nowhere near their desired destination.

Historical records show the Mayflower was destined for what is known today, as Virginia. Old sea charts show, even if it landed where plotted, their Thanksgiving dinner would have been near Staten Island’s Bayonne Bridge, which could have seriously altered history. Imagine watching Martin Scorsese’s, “Pilgrims of Wall Street” staring ye’old Leonardo DiCaprio.

Butterfly effect aside, Mayflower passages were not all stodgy prudes. Some weren’t even Pilgrims. Seemingly, a portion of passengers agreed to rules made by the “Virginia Company”, (the guys bankrolling the deal, thus hoped-for arrival location), just to hitch a free ride. All having something to do with a Royal Charter, but more on business schemes next year.

Like now, Reawakening an America Dream, (name of my latest book btw), was on everyone’s mind, especially since a population surge in England was causing great poverty. Plus, with no Charles Schwab, King Charles, like his sons, I & II, confiscated people’s gold to pay their own bills—apparently par for any political age.

So when the, all are welcome recruiting sign went up, it was an even bet for wannabe immigrants. A good idea for Pilgrims Fathers too, until they all hit shore. I failed to mention, there was beer on onboard, (another story for next year). From experience, I know running out of beer is a damn good reason to drop anchor, but putting a party to shore, party being functional word, had its risks.

It seemed during the long voyage, the non-pilgrims turned out to be quite a rowdy bunch and when the new world looked nothing like merry old England, their commitment to the “Virginia Company”, it’s hoped-for landing location and King Charlie, went right out the window, I mean porthole.

Enter Miles Standish, who was “the law” in mercenary clothing, hired to keep order. A guy who likely made your fourth-grade teacher, “Quaker” in her boots as she taught his name and the details of one “Mayflower Compact”.

No, “Mayflower Compact” was not a Thanksgiving recipe! It was an ad hock police power affecting rights of individuals that was in conflict with personal liberty. It basically said, welcome to the New World. Once ashore, we can and will limit your freedoms—”meet the new boss, same as the old boss”.

Free or not, adventures, tradesmen, and Pilgrims alike went ashore shooting, looting and scaring Native Americans and their kids. After nearly five weeks, bored and hungry, they moved on to the famous Plymouth Rock, still nowhere near Virginia as originally planned, where they settled in for the winter.

All of them might have died near that granite boulder on which they stepped, if not for an “Indian”, named Squanto, who mysteriously spoke English and negotiated an Indian soup kitchen of sorts, for those unfortunate starving settlers. Today we celebrate that event, but not Squanto, on a day called Thanksgiving.

This year, remain open and accepting of others in thoughts or deeds and have a Happy and Blessed Day.

Kevin J Palmer, writer rebel producer poet

Published byKevin J. Palmer
Economic Justice Activist

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Not Accurately Identifying The Problem http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/11/09/not-accurately-identifying-the-problem/ Tue, 09 Nov 2021 16:28:18 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1408 Not Accurately Identifying The Problem Encore Performance Published on March 11, 2015 The governor’s balanced budget initiative has brought back an old argument that comes up whenever it is time to cut spending. How much more money is needed to make education work? Spending money on kids is a great Read more…

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Not Accurately Identifying The Problem

The governor’s balanced budget initiative has brought back an old argument that comes up whenever it is time to cut spending. How much more money is needed to make education work? Spending money on kids is a great argument but maybe the question is about how the current educational system works. The best lessons I learned were from my parents who worked harder at my education than anybody who was paid to teach me. Granted you can spend money on computers, buildings and administrators but that alone has not translated to success. Before money is automatically thrown into a self-serving spending cycle, challenges in the educational system must be accurately identified. History teaches us collective wisdom of the day determined the source of the black plague was decidedly fleas and dogs were slaughtered by the hundreds. But like a lot of well-intentioned ideas it was somewhat wide of the mark, and had unexpected consequences. The thought leaders of the time, by not accurately identifying that the problem was rat fleas, unwittingly eliminating the most effective way in 1349 to hold down the rat population and thus a more vicious rash of Black Plague spread. –Always positioning to spend money on education gets old for tax payers. No one likes paying taxes without a desired return. My hope is in over six hundred years we have an evolved thought process.

Published by

Kevin J. Palmer

Economic Justice Activist

 

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People who are ‘right a lot’ make decisions differently than Everyone Else http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/10/06/people-who-are-right-a-lot-make-decisions-differently-than-everyone-else/ Wed, 06 Oct 2021 16:51:21 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1392 THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO BUSINESS   Jeff Bezos: People who are ‘right a lot’ make decisions differently than everyone else—here’s how   We often view the most powerful leaders as being decisive, continual and unwavering. We admire and celebrate them. A number of studies have even echoed this very same Read more…

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THE DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO BUSINESS

 

Jeff Bezos: People who are ‘right a lot’ make decisions differently than everyone else—here’s how

 

We often view the most powerful leaders as being decisive, continual and unwavering. We admire and celebrate them.

A number of studies have even echoed this very same idea. In his body of research, Jim Collins, lecturer and author of “Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap…and Others Don’t,” found that a common quality among great leaders is speed and decisiveness.

But Jeff Bezos, who announced Tuesday that he will step down from his role as Amazon CEO in late 2021 and transition to the role of executive chair, sees things a little differently.

Consistency of thought isn’t a positive trait

In a blog post from 2012, Jason Fried, co-founder of Basecamp and co-author of the New York Times best-selling book “Rework,” recounts a time when Bezos stopped by the company’s headquarters and did a 45-minute Q&A session. In one of his answers, the Amazon founder shared an interesting insight about people who are “right a lot.”

According to Fried, ”[Bezos] said people who were right a lot of the time were people who often changed their minds […]. It’s perfectly healthy — encouraged, even — to have an idea tomorrow that contradicted your idea today.”

Jeff Bezos’ wife would rather have a child with 9 fingers than one without this skill

Bezos went on to explain that the smartest people he’s observed were always “revising their understanding, reconsidering a problem they thought they’d already solved. They’re open to new points of view, new information, new ideas, contradictions, and challenges to their own way of thinking,” Fried recalls.

In short, smart people (a.k.a. those who are “right a lot”), change their minds — a lot.

Nothing is definite

When asked what trait signified someone who was “wrong a lot” of the time, Fried says Bezos’ answer was “the tendency to be obsessed with details that only support one point of view. If someone can’t climb out of the details, and see the bigger picture from multiple angles, they’re often wrong most of the time.”

It’s important to note that Bezos isn’t implying that smart people are insecure about their decisions. He’s simply saying that they’re comfortable with being wrong, which then allows them to analyze new data, be open to new opinions and revisit long-standing positions.

As psychologist Mel Schwartz writes, “One of the most prevalent — and damaging — themes in our culture is the need to be right. It is so deeply embedded in our belief system and in our collective psyche that we never even pause to consider it.”

It’s not just Bezos

At a D10 conference in 2012, Tim Cook shared a number of lessons he learned from Steve Jobs. What impressed the Apple CEO the most was Jobs’ ability to change his mind, quickly and often.

“Steve would flip on something so fast that you would forget that he was the one taking the 180-degree polar opposite position the day before,” he told the audience. “I saw it daily. This is a gift, because things do change, and it takes courage to change. It takes courage to say, ‘I was wrong.’ I think he had that.”

Al Pittampalli, author of “Persuadable: How Great Leaders Change Their Minds to Change the World,” is a consultant who has worked with leaders at NASA, Boeing and IBM. In an interview with Canadian Business, he argues that the smartest people “don’t wait for that negative feedback to come to them, they hurry up and try to actually say, ‘If I need to change my mind, I might as well do it sooner rather than later.’”

So the next time you make a decision, remember that it’s okay to be a little “wishy-washy.” The goal is to get it right. You can still take bold stances and hold strong opinions, but know that they can be temporary. That’s the best way to ensure, as often as possible, that you’ll actually get it right.

 

Published Tue, Mar 12 201910:31 AM EDTUpdated Tue, Feb 2 20214:46 PM EST Jeff Haden

 

 

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A Participatory Experience of Place http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/07/08/a-participatory-experience-of-place/ Thu, 08 Jul 2021 15:16:01 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1378 In the Hopi language, everything the power of the world does is done in a circle….the wind, in it’s greatest power, whirls. Birds make their nests in circles, for theirs is the same religion as ours. The sun comes forth and goes down again in a circle. The moon does Read more…

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In the Hopi language, everything the power of the world does is done in a circle….the wind, in it’s greatest power, whirls. Birds make their nests in circles, for theirs is the same religion as ours. The sun comes forth and goes down again in a circle. The moon does the same, and both are round…even the seasons form a great circle in their changing, and always come back again to where they were. The life of a man is a circle from childhood to childhood and so it is in everything where power moves.

The curvature of time in oral cultures is very difficult to articulate on the page, for it defies the linearity of the printed line. The alphabet alters all this, in order to read phonetically, we must disengage the synesthetic participation between our senses and the encompassing earth. A new reflexivity between the human organism and its own signs, short-circuiting the sensory reciprocity between that organism and the land (the reflective intellect is precisely this new reflexive loop, this new reflection between ourselves and our written signs). Human encounters and events begin to become interesting in their own right, independent of their relation to natural cycles.

Now, this is interesting when he discusses the Jewish culture.  The ancient Hebrews were the first people to “discover” a linear, non repeating mode of time:

To the ancient Hebrews, or what we know of them through the lease of the Hebrew Bible, the cyclical return of seasonal events commanded far less attention than those happenings that were unique and without precedent (natural catastrophes, sieges, battles, and the like), for it was these non repeating events that signaled the will of YHWH, or God, in relation to the Hebrew people. In Eliade’s terms, these unique occurrences, whose consequences were often devastating (either to the Hebrews or to their enemies), were interpreted by the prophets ad “negative theophany’s,” as expressions of YHWH/s wrath. Thus interpreted, these discordant and non repeating events acquired a coherence previously unknown, and so began to stand out from the cyclical unfolding of natural phenomena. And the Hebrew nation came to comprehend itself in relation to this new, non repeating modality of time – that is, in relation to history.

For the first time, we find affirmed, and increasingly accepted, the idea that historical events have a value in themselves, insofar as they are determined by the will of God.

The Hebrews are, as well, the first truly alphabetic culture that we know of, the first “People of the Book.” Indeed, at the founding event of the Jewish nation – the great theophany stop Mount Sinai-Moses inscribes the commandments dictated by YHWH (the most sacred of God’s names) upon two stone tables presumably in an alphabetic script. (Contemporary scholars place the exodus from Egypt sometime around 1250 B.C.E.it is just at the time that the twenty-two-letter, consonantal aleph-both was coming into use in the area of Canaan, or Palestine.)

A new sense of time as a non repeating sequence begins to make itself felt over and against the ceaseless cycling of the cosmos. The variously scribed letters of the Hebrew Bible are the first sustained record of this new sensibility.

By carrying on its lettered surface the vital stories earlier carried by the terrain itself, the written text became a kind of portable homeland for the Hebrew people. BY virtue of the portable ground, the Jewish people have been able to preserve their singular culture, and thus themselves while in an almost perpetual state of exile from the actual lands where their ancestral stories unfolded.

Yet many of the written narratives in the Bible are already stories of displacement, of exile, the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the garden of Eden, to the wandering of the Israelites in the desert. The Jewish sense of exile was never merely a state of separation form a specific locale, from a particular ground; it was (and is) also a sense of separation from the very possibility of being entirely at home. This deeper sense of displacement, this sense of always already being in exile, is inseparable, I suggest, from alphabetic literary, this great and difficult magic of which the Hebrews were the first real caretakers. Alphabetic writing can engage the human senses only to the extend that those senses ever, at least provisionally, their spontaneous participation with the animate earth. To being to read is thus already to be displaced, cut off from the sensory nourishment of a more-than-human field of forms. It is also, however, to feel the still lingering savor of that nourishment, and so to yearn, to home, that such contact and conviviality may someday return. “Because being Jewish,” as Edmond Jabes has written, “means exiling yourself in the world, and at the same time, weeping for your exile.

Moreover, the trajectory of time, for the ancient Hebrews, was by no means linear. The holy days described in the Bible are costly bound to the intertwined cycles of the sun and the moon. Further, the non repeating, historical time alluded to by Eliade seems to correlate with the sense of existential separation and exile. It is thus that, in Hebrew tradition, the expulsion from the eternity of Eden (and, later, the destruction of the Temple) is mirrored, at the other end of sequential history, by the promised return from exile, the coming of the Messiah, and an end to separated time. The forward trajectory of time, that is, will at last open outward, flowing back into the spacious eternity of living place (“the promised land”), and so into a golden age of peace between all nations. Eternity lies not in a separated heaven (the ancient Hebrews knew of no such realm) but in the promise of a future reconciliation on the earth.

Time and space are still profoundly influenced by one another in the Hebrew Bible. They are never entirely distinguishable, for they are still informed, however distantly, be a participatory experience of place.

Pamela Chambers M.Ed., N.B.C.C.

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SCOTTDALE

Palmer Private Equity, is rooted in Kevin’s Behavioral Economic Research that once set standards for Wall Street brokerage firms.

Its Philanthropic entity invests for the public good in the family’s nonprofit. Kevin is a Financial Freedom Fighter, who as an epigrammatic writer illustrates  how emotional intelligence leads to decision processes that enable economic dignity & improves quality of life.

He published two books as well as numerous articles and blogs on economic and financially related topics and his third book will be out in 2023. Kevin has also had radio appearances on NPR’s Market Place, NPR affiliate KJZZ-FM, KXTZ-FM, as well as television appearances on KPNX-TV, KVVU-TV5, KNXV-TV. He currently resides in Scottsdale, AZ

“Peace through Prosperity” projects to challenge Injustices through Self-empowerment.


Kevin Palmer writer-rebel-producer-poet http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer Arizona http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer www.thequietrich.com

Author Kevin Palmer http://reawakeninganamericandream.com 

Kevin Palmer Arizona www.smainstitute.com

Kevin Palmer Phoenix www.kevinpalmerscottsdale.com

 

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Kevin j Palmer Quote http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/06/07/kevin-j-palmer-quote/ Mon, 07 Jun 2021 15:44:51 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1367 “I lack faith in mankind because there is too much at stake.” Kevin j Palmer           Palmer Private Equity, is rooted in Kevin’s Behavioral Economic Research that once set standards for Wall Street brokerage firms. It is now run by Kevin & Gretchen both formally trained Read more…

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“I lack faith in mankind because there is too much at stake.” Kevin j Palmer

 

 

 

 

 

Palmer Private Equity, is rooted in Kevin’s Behavioral Economic Research that once set standards for Wall Street brokerage firms. It is now run by Kevin & Gretchen both formally trained at NYSE traded corporations. Its Philanthropic entity invests for the public good in the family’s nonprofit. Kevin is a Financial Freedom Fighter, who as an epigrammatic writer illustrates  how emotional intelligence leads to decision processes that enable economic dignity & improves quality of life. He published two books as well as numerous articles and blogs on economic and financially related topics and his third book will be out in 2023. Kevin has also had radio appearances on NPR’s Market Place, NPR affiliate KJZZ-FM, KXTZ-FM, as well as television appearances on KPNX-TV, KVVU-TV5, KNXV-TV. He currently resides in Scottsdale, AZ.

 

“Peace through Prosperity” projects to challenge Injustices through Self-empowerment.
Kevin Palmer writer-rebel-producer-poet http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer Arizona http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer www.thequietrich.com

Author Kevin Palmer http://reawakeninganamericandream.com 

Kevin Palmer Arizona www.smainstitute.com

Kevin Palmer Phoenix www.kevinpalmerscottsdale.com

 

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Human Nature not Modern Culture is Destroying Earth’s Biodiversity http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/05/25/human-nature-not-modern-culture-is-destroying-earths-biodiversity/ Tue, 25 May 2021 15:42:59 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1353 A polluted and deteriorating planet is easily blamed on societal impacts of digitalization, a virtual generation, or a global breakdown of “decent society”. Man’s ego, makes it hard to simply admit that humans are still way too immature. Emotional Development somehow never figures into the destruction equation. That’s a shame, Read more…

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A polluted and deteriorating planet is easily blamed on societal impacts of digitalization, a virtual generation, or a global breakdown of “decent society”. Man’s ego, makes it hard to simply admit that humans are still way too immature. Emotional Development somehow never figures into the destruction equation. That’s a shame, because to fix a worst-case scenario global catastrophe, we first need to accurately assess the source of the problem. In other words, starting from true north will avoid disappointing results caused by a wrong premise. Believing mass human maturity is someday possible, I studied the full body of broadly accepted research about our past, before considering future solutions.

 

The Ailment

 

Humans have altered climate, eradicated species and destroyed much of the planet’s natural land. They do so because of a belief, that what’s in the best interest of man’s short life span, supersedes long-term sanctity of all others. Most extraordinary accomplishments come from 2% of the population. The inverse is true when it comes to extinguishing wildlife and natural habitats. Studies show two thirds of people care about the planet but far less act. Most accept diesel truck deliveries, use plastic bags or have children. Childbearing seems silly to point out but since humans reproduce exponentially and transfer their habits, our planet is doomed.

 

The disorder here is we rationalize our actions to make us feel better about what we do. Mankind has good excuses as to why they come first and prove it using narrowminded reasoning. This is often seen in cultural stereotyping. In the 1800’s Italians were unsavory because they cooked with garlic. Native Americans are sacrilegious because they used peyote. Burkas are offensive due to rare instances of genital mutilation. Correct conclusions notwithstanding, most of the equation is left out for easier self-serving rationalization. Thus, being at fault for destroying the planet is easy for many to accept—or should I say rationalize.

 

Aggressive Technology

Selfish prejudices are not cultural anomalies but our true nature. Dare I say, we are only human and neophytes in emotional development. What has fooled us into thinking we are so smart, is that utilitarian technology proceeds psychological advancement. Primitive weapons came long before the wheel and we dominated in a considerably short period of time on the evolutionary scale because aggressive technology developed first and rather quickly. Catching up to those advancements emotionally will still take millenniums, because life as a pleasant, cooperative garden of Eden was not our beginning—but could be our future.

 

Paleoanthropologists

 

Confirmed in field studies and even my own archaeology experience, primitive culture was intense and lethal. Skeletons from hunter gatherers show patterns of intense warfare among groups that included axes and projectile weapons. Nomadic foraging society was far from carefree. Look back at your own adolescence, it seemed like a breeze. Reality is—youth was difficult but rationalization helps whitewash the bad memories. So too are notions of early hunter gathers serenely roaming the planet.

 

Nine human species walked the Earth 300,000 years ago and we wiped out the other eight. Our modern ancestors who spread of out of Africa, didn’t cause mass extinctions through negotiation. It was done by annihilation. The men in mankind took what they wanted, including women. Random sexual encounters commonly happened because power was the law. Children needed to be raised by many because there were no institutional delineations—that came 290,000 years later with farming and land ownership.

 

Yet political systems and religions prefer to paint a past picture of humble creatures that peacefully conform when historicity, we were about clubs and guerrilla tactics. In hunter gather days, hunting was not the danger. The leading cause of death among men was violence. Sound familiar? It is hard to accept that our ancestors wiped out their own relatives through genocide.

 

The Bright Spot

 

However, take heart, there’s a simple solution—emotional maturity. We’ve been civilized for only 10,000 years, as marked by agrarian society a mere 5% of our time as modern Home Sapiens. Rationalizing what we believe is normal but instead of finding people to help confirm we are right, like a political party or a single internet proof. Evolve emotional conscience and broaden the perspective. Becoming cognizant of how the primate brain works. Then honor our bipedality, opposable thumbs, and intelligence by striving for a greater purpose. Launch it from inside your own back yard to lead others as better stewards. Because all animals, plants and humans, must coexist for our long-term survival.

 

Evolve emotionally to the next level and save the planet’s biodiversity by understanding human weaknesses. As there is toxicity in relationships never to be accepted, the same holds true for Mother Earth. We need to protect her as we do ourselves by giving up bad habits for new ideas and working together with effort and self-discipline. Historically humans became cooperative hunters and wiped-out predators. Using similar collaboration for a greater good, we can save the planet that sustains our species. Framing decisions with an emotional maturity that honors our divine uniqueness, truly makes us civilized.

 

Kevin j Palmer

writer rebel producer poet

 

 

 

 

 

 

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NPR’s, Kevin Palmer Reporting http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/04/30/1324/ Fri, 30 Apr 2021 14:33:38 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1324 Wealth Expert Kevin Palmer on NPR’s, Market Place Money Kevin J. Palmer is a financial industry veteran devoted to challenging economic injustices by empowering others to attain Financial Freedom. His proficiencies are rooted in decades of driving performance for Wall Street giants Merrill Lynch and Paine Webber. Then, as Managing Director Read more…

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Wealth Expert Kevin Palmer on NPR’s, Market Place Money

Kevin J. Palmer is a financial industry veteran devoted to challenging economic injustices by empowering others to attain Financial Freedom. His proficiencies are rooted in decades of driving performance for Wall Street giants Merrill Lynch and Paine Webber. Then, as Managing Director at Strategic Management Advisors where partnering with other executives, he built better broker-dealers by improving business models during an industry paradigm shift. Opposing power in the hands of the too few, this writer, rebel, producer, poet exploded into advocacy to end economic abuse and assure morally achieved wealth. Humbled by blessings and aversion to seeing suffering, this unabashed champion of financial justice also participates in wildlife rescue, environmental stewardship–and as recipient of the Governors Archaeology award, is fascinated by the lives of individuals who lived thousands of years ago. He published a previous book, The Quiet Rich, as well as numerous articles and blogs on economic and financially related topics. Kevin has also had radio appearances on NPR’s Market Place, NPR affiliate KJZZ-FM, KXTZ-FM, as well as television appearances on KPNX-TV, KVVU-TV5, KNXV-TV. He currently resides in Scottsdale, AZ.

COO / Co-Principle

Palmer Private Equity

Dates EmployedOct 2017 – Present

Employment Duration3 yrs 4 mos

LocationScottsdale AZ.

Kevin Palmer writer-rebel-producer-poet http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

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Author Kevin Palmer http://reawakeninganamericandream.com

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Author and Journalist Kevin Palmer strategicmanagementadvisors.com

SMA Institute Kevin Palmer http://KevinJPalmer.com

Kevin Palmer Arizona https://www.smainstitute.com/journalism.html

Kevin Palmer http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

Kevin Palmer has spent 32 years in the securities industry and was most recently registered with First Montauk in Scottsdale, Arizona (2001-2008); Merrill Lynch in New York, New York (1994-2001); and Painewebber in Weehawken, New Jersey (1985-1994). http://KevinJPalmer.com

Kevin Palmer Scottsdale ADD TO WISHLIST Paperback $17.95 $16.51

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In Book Stores Now http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/2021/01/04/in-book-stores-now/ Mon, 04 Jan 2021 15:23:05 +0000 http://kevinpalmerscottsdale.com/?p=1242 Reawakening an American Dream: Creating Your Path to Financial Freedom by Kevin J. Palmer  Kevin J. Palmer knows the downsides of a one-size-fits-all, “get-rich-quick” approach to generating wealth. He claims that many financial experts present information from the singular, subjective lens of personal experience, rather than tested and proven techniques. In Read more…

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Reawakening an American Dream: Creating Your Path to Financial Freedom

by Kevin J. Palmer 

Kevin J. Palmer knows the downsides of a one-size-fits-all, “get-rich-quick” approach to generating wealth. He claims that many financial experts present information from the singular, subjective lens of personal experience, rather than tested and proven techniques. In Reawakening an American Dream, Palmer explains that the only “expert” capable of determining how to create wealth is the individual working to generate that wealth.

Kevin Palmer Phoenix

writer rebel producer poet

Kevin Palmer Phoenix

break from the crowd https://www.smainstitute.com/journalism.html

economic justice activist   strategicmanagementadvisors.com

Kevin Palmer discharged

author and Journalist Kevin Palmer http://palmerholdinggroup.com

SMA Institute Kevin Palmer  http://thequietrich.com/

Wealth Expert Kevin Palmer http://KevinJPalmer.com

Kevin Palmer Arizona http://KevinjPalmerAuthor.com

writer rebel producer poet http://KevinPalmerArizona.com

financial freedom fighter http://reawakeninganamericandream.com

Kevin Palmer Scottdale

 

 

 

 

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