There was a moment—one I can pinpoint with surgical clarity—where I realized they weren’t just trying to deny me care.
They were trying to disappear me!
The surveillance. The metadata. The disclosure. Not because I broke a law. Not because I posed a danger. But because I became inconvenient.
My name didn’t raise a red flag. My identity did.
UnitedHealthcare had no legal reason to send my personal medical information to police.
There was no warrant. No subpoena. No imminent danger. Just a phone call where I dared to assert my rights. Just a timeline that challenged their narrative. Just a trans woman on Medicaid who refused to be silent.
So they flipped the script. And they framed me.
Not as a person.
But as a potential threat.
And that is what happens when corporate systems are allowed to function like state intelligence. This wasn’t about safety. It was about containment. It was about eliminating the variables they couldn’t control.
It didn’t matter what I actually said. It didn’t matter that I followed the law. They labeled me unstable. Flagged me as risky. And then quietly delivered that label to the Grand Junction Police Department.
That is administrative erasure.
They didn’t kick down my door. They didn’t need to. Because when a bureaucratic label says "dangerous," you don’t need to be dangerous. You just need to be documented.
The day I felt so small was the day I felt like Luigi.
Not Mario. Not the hero. Not the face on the box.
Just the afterthought. The sidekick. The shadow.
That’s what it felt like when they erased me. When my voice was stripped of context. When my medical records were weaponized. When I was framed not as a person—but as a potential threat.
Luigi never asked to be second. He just wanted to exist. To matter. To be seen.
And that’s all I ever wanted, too.
So I built something they can’t erase.
AdministrativeErasure.org
If you want to see what they tried to bury, look here: https://www.administrativeerasure.org/2025/07/the-35-day-myth-of-imminent-threat
This isn’t a conspiracy theory. It’s a paper trail.