>>100100700>Please eat a ban so I can laugh at youIf you were afraid about eating a ban, you wouldn't be bringing up doxxposting in the first place.
>She already did by calling it a Rex instead of a Ray, faggotSaying that she bought an older model does not mean that it has issues.
>That's not how insurance works, you bumbling retard. They can't kick you off insurance because "muh bad paperwork">>100100418>If she was kicked off her old insurance and couldn't immediately just sign up for a different one, what does that mean?Since you don't seem familiar with the American health insurance system, I'll give a bit of a run-down how it works and what happened in her case.
Health insurance plans run for the full calendar year, January 1st to December 31st, and do not allow for changes to be made unless a major life event occurs. (ie. you can't make changes willy-nilly every month just because you want to save a buck)
Towards the end of each year, they hold an open enrollment period where you can freely make changes to the health insurance plan for the next year (moving to cheaper or more expensive plans, adding or removing benefits/features, etc.). Or you can not make any changes and have the system automatically re-enroll you in what you had the current year.
So here's where the issue came in: for 2024, she was still contracted to working for a Japanese company (she graduated mid-January). For 2025, she is no longer contracted to working for a Japanese company, meaning her employment status has changed.
What is very likely to have happened was she either made a mistake on her open enrollment paperwork, or had the system automatically re-enroll her, but she did not account for the change in employment having an impact on the health insurance enrollment process.
Hence why the issue only cropped up at the start of this year, and not at all for the year prior.
>Doesn't have a membershipI do have a membership, that's how I know you're lying. If it did happen, you'd have posted a clip of it by now.