He goes, okay, I'll give you the three, but who am I bidding against?
When the fabric of the story gets ripped apart like this, who am I meant to blame?
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My brain injury forced me to ask the question -- who am I, if not for my capacity to succeed?
If Daniel knocks me out of the way in his haste to empty the Diaper Genie, who am I to complain?
Alas, we live in a world where self-worth and net worth are often blended together when asking such highly personal questions as: Who am I?
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If he wants me to make money in the market and will do everything in his power to foster this result, who am I to argue?
And who am I to question the value of a breathalyzer test that prevents coders from changing their code while drunk, or a robotic beer dispenser that works with a wave of an RFID-wearing wrist?
At most of our modern campuses, we've replaced leadership with codes, judgment with zero tolerance, and standards of right and wrong with Who Am I To Judge and then we are shocked, shocked when scandal erupts.
So Jane Doe, as you unravel the who am I now question, it might be a good idea to let yourself off the hook for landing here, right now, with a big question mark on your forehead.
You might start with: Who am I?
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Am I no longer entitled to some separation between who I am when I'm talking about technology rather than when I'm talking about my political beliefs, should I choose to separate those things?
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Well, I am one of those marketers who wants to know who you are, who I am talking to.
Sort of AWOL at the moment, and my intention is just not to go back, because it's just, it takes too much of who I am, I suppose.
And I'm proud to say that over eight years on national issues, I was a consistent conservative -- cutting taxes, balancing the budget, reducing regulation, promoting welfare reform, fighting for good conservative judges with a hundred percent pro-life voting record, and I'm proud of that record. (Applause.) That's who I was then, that's who I am today, and that's the kind of president I would be.
CNN: Thompson's October 19, 2007, speech to Value Voters Summit
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