Most Insurance companies consider the body piercers to be too high a risk to offer insurance.
In addition, Body piercing as a profession is such a small sector that most insurers do not consider it a large enough market to develop a specific insurance program for it.
In many or most states not having liability is against the law. No insurance and you drive illegally, or you do not drive at all.
These piercings (actually body mods) need to be removed by a health care professional to avoid secondary infection. Legally body piercers are not permitted under law to remove dermal anchors. Go see your Doctor
You need to go see a professional body piercer and explain your situation and let them have a look at what you have done. They will if possible help you out, to a point, but there is a limit to what professional body piercers will do for free.
Liability insurance usually follows the vehicle not the driver. (unless the driver was specificly excluded in this case it cant happen because he's your son). As long as the car was insured and he was given premission to drive it, the insurance will be valid in court * Not necessarily. Insurance coverage varies greatly when it pertains to minors living in the household of the insured. If one is lucky enough for it to apply you may be certain that premiums will significantly increase.
Yes most of the time you can unless your Dealership specifically states that you cant. Most leased vehicles you have a "manditory" coverage. You just have to make sure you apply storage insurance with that coverage. Could be something like this 5,000,000 liability 300 collision / comprehensive replacement insurance
they do this for the different types of products they sell. usually they have an insurance side and an ivestment side. they do this for liability reasons as each name is a separate entity under a larger umbrella. if one crumbles tho other ones stay intact and creditors cant come after the solvent ones that are left.
and why????
No.
Chances are, you cant. Unless your insurance pays for it.
Go for Insurance claim
Yes, most definitely. If you cant get the jewerly off, and have been trying for a while, stop trying. The more you pull and tug at it trying to get the jewelry off, the more you irritate the piercing and run the risk of hurting yourself. For most piercers, when they take you on as a client, they follow through with you with any help that you need. Most piercers will take jewelry off as a courtesy. I would definitely go back to your piercer.
you cant because it is not legal