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@mike69 saidMandibles and McCrikey are among the rarest of family names in North America.
How is anyone going to find you from your date of birth and first name.
The odds that my parents would meet and get married AND agree to a hyphenated name is vanishingly small, which would somewhat narrow the field for the search.
Thank you for asking.
@Martin saidOn a site for people on the spectrum they post happy birthday to you in the forums, I thought that was a little much. I’m terrible on knowing how to protect yourself online and what trackers are etc..
I rest my case - WHY are you giving out personal information over the internet??????????????? - even though it is a joke.
Even as a joke it can lead people to your true identity - ever heard of trackers?
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@Arkturos saidOK - I Googled your name(s)
Mandibles and McCrikey are among the rarest of family names in North America.
The odds that my parents would meet and get married AND agree to a hyphenated name is vanishingly small, which would somewhat narrow the field for the search.
Thank you for asking.
"In this eerily prophetic novel from the Orange Prize-winning author of We Need to Talk About Kevin, a once-wealthy family faces the prospect of ruin. This apocalypse is financial - the dollar is in meltdown, America’s national debt far beyond repayment. It is 2029."
It looks like you have come back from the future to haunt us.
Maybe just give up on the paranoia old chap; no-one cares about your name, address or date of birth - unless, of course, you have something to hide!!!
@Martin saidIt's not so much that I have something to hide as that I feel I'm under attack, in a more specific way than others here have been.
Maybe just give up on the paranoia old chap; no-one cares about your name, address or date of birth - unless, of course, you have something to hide!!!
Aren't we still waiting for an answer from "Paul Martin"?