A customer is at the center of a heated online debate after revealing she had a woman kicked out of a fast food restaurant for bringing her dog inside.
The drama was shared in a Reddit post by a user who said he was midway through lunch when a woman walked into the restaurant with a 100-pound Tibetan mastiff – despite a clear ‘no dogs allowed’ policy.
The dog, he claimed, didn’t appear to be a service animal.
‘She sat right next to me – probably to avoid being seen by the staff,’ he wrote.
When he returned to his table after refilling his drink, he said he was shocked to find long strands of the dog’s hair all over his table and even on his French fries.
‘I’m a dog person myself,’ he recalled telling her, ‘but your dog is shedding onto my table [and] food. I’d appreciate it if you’d sit outside or at least move to a different section.’
Instead of apologizing, the woman told him he could move – sparking a tense back-and-forth, according to the poster.
Eventually, he alerted an employee, who asked the woman to leave, but she didn’t go quietly.
The drama unfolded in a Reddit post by user SoCalGiraffe, who said he was midway through lunch when a woman walked into the restaurant with a 100-pound Tibetan mastiff (stock image) in tow – despite a clear no-dogs-allowed policy
When the Reddit poster returned to his table after refilling his drink, he said he was shocked to find long strands of the dog’s hair all over his table and even on his french fries (stock image)
‘She called me every name in the book and accused me of hating animals,’ he wrote.
The poster added that he actually had his own dog waiting in the car with the air conditioning on – a detail that divided opinions in the comments.
‘I ate for a quick 10 minutes,’ he said, while also noting that he also volunteers at animal shelters.
The story, posted in Reddit’s popular ‘Am I the A–hole?’ forum, exploded with over 500 comments – with most siding with the original poster.
‘NTA. Who wants fries with a side of dog hair?’ one user said.
‘These “take my dog everywhere I go” people need to be stopped,’ another commenter added, earning over 4,500 upvotes – an upvote on Reddit is a way for users to express approval or agreement with a post or comment.
‘As a service dog owner, people like this make me so angry. If everyone brought their pet to a restaurant, can you imagine how dirty things would be?!’ another user commented on the crowdsourced discussion site.
Others criticized the woman for putting restaurant staff – especially those with allergies – in a tough spot.
‘That woman made it more difficult for staff, the other customers, the cleaners… all for her sense of entitlement,’ one user wrote.
Etiquette expert Jo Hayes also weighed in, telling Fox News Digital that she agreed ‘100%, no questions asked.’
‘Dogs in restaurants are unsanitary,’ she said. ‘This poor customer had dog hair shedding onto their fries – that is disgusting. No one should have to deal with this.’
She emphasized that rules exist for a reason, writing, ‘If the restaurant has a clearly stipulated policy – whether it be no animals, patrons must wear shoes, or no children in the play area by themselves – patrons have a duty to comply. This is for the health, comfort, and safety of all.’
Still, not everyone was on board with how the situation was handled.
A few commenters said the original poster could’ve simply moved to another table, while others blasted him for leaving his dog in the car – even with the AC running.
‘YTA for leaving your dog in your car while you ate,’ one wrote, noting that air conditioners can fail unexpectedly and that in many states, it is illegal to leave animals unattended in cars.
‘ACs have been known to stop cooling without warning,’ another added. ‘It’s not worth the risk.’
Some suggested he should’ve just gone through the drive-thru or eaten with his dog in the car.
Regardless of the split opinions, most agreed on one thing – dogs that aren’t service animals have no place in restaurants.
‘Rules exist for a reason,’ one commenter summed up. ‘This wasn’t about hating animals – it was about basic hygiene and respect for other people’s space.’