


Confirm to Facebook you want to delete your account and data.Navigate to Facebook's delete account page.Login to with your username and password.Of course, some content like messages may still be visible by friends. When you delete your Facebook account, you can't regain access once it's completely deleted by Facebook.įacebook is on the internet, so it's important to remember some things just can't be deleted forever.ĭeactivating a Facebook account enables users to hide their timeline, profile, and posts out of public view. “I vote all 30,000 of us run a really tight circle around the Capital keeping Congress from leaving the building until they resolve everything,” Jessica Lynn King wrote on Facebook.Since some things like messages aren't stored on your account, your friends may still be able to see them. However, race organizers have said the course may have to change. The Army Ten Miler is still scheduled to take place in Washington, D.C., on Sunday even if the shutdown continues. “Marine Corps Marathon staff is paid with non-appropriated funds," Tami Faram, public relations coordinator for the marathon, told Runner’s World. Some runners questioned what had changed the minds of Marine Corps Marathon organizers who had told Runner’s World two weeks earlier that the government shutdown didn’t threaten the race. Be happy to show up in DC and time anyone that wants to run,” Matthew Reimer wrote on the Facebook post.

Others wrote that they would be happy to set up a course through D.C. His Facebook biography says he is an engineer in the U.S. I hope everyone joins me,” Chris O’Leary posted to the Facebook account. I am running for charity and have worked my ass off for this. There are no obstacles or barricades that will stop me. Most of the runners who posted on the Facebook page declared their intentions to travel to Washington, D.C., and still run the race even if it is canceled. Many runners and other supporters immediately used social media channels to express their dismay and disappointment that the government shutdown - which was in its sixteenth day - would threaten a race many have trained months for and that has meaning well beyond the race itself. Organizers did not say in the message whether runners would be reimbursed or offered entry into future marathons if this year's race is canceled. The race sold out in a little more than two hours, with runners paying $99 to enter and many participants raising thousands of dollars for charity in the process of their training.
