‘I would fire you too’: Texas worker exposed a health violation at his restaurant, but the internet is bashing him for one mistake

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A Texas restaurant worker lost his job after trying to expose a health violation at his workplace, but the internet was not entirely on his side. The employee, who goes by the username Lonerofanonlyheart5 on Reddit, shared his story in the r/legal community. He said he was fired after going public with footage of a leak in his kitchen. The problem was outside water dripping directly onto a grill used for cooking burgers and breakfast items. The employee said the restaurant owner ignored his requests to get it fixed, so he reported the issue to both the health department and OSHA. He then went a step further and posted a warning online, including video evidence of the water leaking onto the cooking surface. According to The Nerd Stash, his post did not go the way he expected. Within an hour of sharing it, he was fired. He turned to Reddit for advice, seemingly thinking he was in the right because he had reported a real safety concern. Instead, he was met with hundreds of comments from users who said he had made a serious mistake. Posting to social media, not the health department, is what cost him his job Most Reddit users agreed that while reporting to the authorities is a protected action, taking it to social media is a completely different matter. One commenter said, “You were on a roll right up until you put it on social media.” Another added, “You took the nuclear option, so they did as well…. Shoulda let the complaint play out.” Another person said, “I would fire you too.”  Texas has seen its share of restaurant-related social media moments, like when a server’s one question ruined a birthday surprise at a Texas Roadhouse. The top-upvoted comment laid out exactly where the worker went wrong. The user explained, “They can’t fire you for complaining to OSHA or the health department, but they can fire you for posting on social media.” Many businesses have strict social media policies, and the restaurant’s termination letter confirmed this was the deciding factor. The employer officially fired the worker for “disparaging the company on social media.” Fired for posting about health violation. by inlegal This case highlights the clear difference between protected whistleblowing and public disparagement. While the health violation on the grill sounds like a genuine issue, posting the video online gave the employer a solid reason to let him go. Even when the intention is public safety, the choice of platform can change everything. Had the employee stopped after contacting the health department and OSHA, he would likely have kept his legal protections. By posting the video online, he removed those protections and gave his employer the grounds they needed to fire him.  As one commenter put it, it is important to “keep social media and work completely separate.” Texans have also shown that thinking outside the box can pay off in unexpected situations, just like a Texas couple who escaped a parking dispute by using their Hyundai Santa Fe in a clever way. This incident is a reminder that even when you are right about a safety hazard, how you handle it matters just as much. Sticking to official channels is the safest way to report workplace issues without putting your job at risk.