The top 10 most inspiring quotes by Valerie Plame
- My take is, privacy is precious. I think privacy is the last true luxury. To be able to live your life as you choose without having everyone comment on it or know about.
- The options are war versus peace, and I am delighted that, so far, it appears that peaceful negotiation has won the day.
- We need the best and the brightest to go into public service.
- To my knowledge, no one has died from a cyberattack… but there is a gray area between peace and war.
- We don’t have to sit by while Trump uses his enormous global platform to undermine our national security. We would love to be able to actually force Twitter’s hand to live up to its rules, explicitly forbidding hate speech and encouraging violence.
- From a counter-intelligence viewpoint, the OPM breach is really scary – but if we continue to see the erosion of purely commercial enterprises, where people lose confidence, the economy falters.
- These are issues we’ve been grappling with since the Constitution was written: how you hold your government to account for its words and deeds. It’s all about power and the abuse of power.
- I do not subscribe to the ‘Trump is crazy like a fox’ thing. I think that’s being too generous.
- The great thing about fiction is you can fix things and make things better.
- There is definitely a sense that when you, as a CIA ops officer… are handling assets, they are delivering to you their trust and their well-being. And you feel very protective of them, even if they’re not very nice people.

Valerie Plame, born August 13, 1963, in Anchorage, Alaska, is a former CIA officer, author, and political activist best known for her covert identity being publicly revealed in 2003. A graduate of Pennsylvania State University with a degree in advertising, she later earned a master’s degree from the London School of Economics.
Plame joined the CIA in 1985, serving primarily in counter-proliferation and nuclear intelligence operations. Her undercover status was exposed in a newspaper column by Robert Novak, following her husband Joseph Wilson’s public criticism of the U.S. government’s rationale for the Iraq War. The incident, known as the “Plame Affair,” sparked a political scandal and legal investigations.
After leaving the CIA in 2005, Plame authored memoirs including Fair Game (2007) and became an advocate for nuclear nonproliferation. She has also been involved in public speaking, writing, and even political campaigns, continuing to engage in national security and policy issues.
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