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Posted

Hardly when I'm sitting in London typing this.

 

As for that slur, it's barely worthy of a response. But I will say this....you attacked several other posters on this thread who raised questions. Irrationally. And I didn't go on the thread about the poor English guy who has left a wife without a husband and a kid without a dad and make derogatory remarks...that'll be you, right? You should be ashamed. I expect it from clowns like Gottfrid and Malcolm so disappointing to see your partake in and something you haven't addressed. Rather pathetic at your age, I'd say.

 

You can have the last word, better things to do than exchange the same stuff with you. Enjoy Spain and chill out. 

Posted
8 hours ago, MarkyM3 said:

Erm...from my reading, he says he earned the money elsewhere outside of the EU. But that's beside the point, health systems are financed by current users, not historic contributions. He wants it all paid for without contributing now. He isn't even a Spanish citizen presently, despite having been one in the past

You still don't see the light....  You people didn't stay long enough in EU to learn basic rights.

YOU are wrong. He' doing nothing wrong.

Healthcare in the country where you live

  • If you receive a pension from the country where you live, and this pension gives you the right to healthcare benefits, then you and your family are covered by that country's health insurance system — even if you are also receiving pensions from other countries.
  • If you do not receive a pension or any other income from the country where you live: you and your family will receive medical treatment in the country where you live, provided that you would be entitled to medical treatment in the country that pays your pension.
    - You should request an S1 form (former E106 form) from your health insurance institution in the country that pays your pension.
    - When you arrive in your new country, register your S1 form with the relevant health insurance institution. This document establishes your right to full healthcare coverage in your country of residence."
  • Thanks 1
Posted
4 hours ago, MarkyM3 said:

Hardly when I'm sitting in London typing this.

 

As for that slur, it's barely worthy of a response. But I will say this....you attacked several other posters on this thread who raised questions. Irrationally. And I didn't go on the thread about the poor English guy who has left a wife without a husband and a kid without a dad and make derogatory remarks...that'll be you, right? You should be ashamed. I expect it from clowns like Gottfrid and Malcolm so disappointing to see your partake in and something you haven't addressed. Rather pathetic at your age, I'd say.

 

You can have the last word, better things to do than exchange the same stuff with you. Enjoy Spain and chill out. 

"I expect it from clowns like Gottfrid"  Amen brother!

Posted (edited)
On 11/21/2024 at 6:21 PM, Confuscious said:

Second, if you want to know why Thailand requested this information, go ask the Thai government.

I'd be more interested to know how the Thai government knew which bank in which country to request the information from.

 

Back in the UK I have a very common name, no connection between my bank account and my passport, so how? Nobody in the UK knows I live here, so my bank can't offer it.

Edited by BritManToo
Posted
55 minutes ago, GypsyT said:

You still don't see the light....  You people didn't stay long enough in EU to learn basic rights.

YOU are wrong. He' doing nothing wrong.

Healthcare in the country where you live

  • If you receive a pension from the country where you live, and this pension gives you the right to healthcare benefits, then you and your family are covered by that country's health insurance system — even if you are also receiving pensions from other countries.
  • If you do not receive a pension or any other income from the country where you live: you and your family will receive medical treatment in the country where you live, provided that you would be entitled to medical treatment in the country that pays your pension.
    - You should request an S1 form (former E106 form) from your health insurance institution in the country that pays your pension.
    - When you arrive in your new country, register your S1 form with the relevant health insurance institution. This document establishes your right to full healthcare coverage in your country of residence."

Don't bother to explain this to braindead members.

They will never understand this.

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