A viral clip posted on X showed a worker calling out a shop owner in Dover, Delaware, who allegedly refused to pay him after he had worked for two full days. Recording the shop owner from inside his truck, the worker explained that the man had threatened to call the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents on him. “Go ahead and call ICE,” he dared him. The disgruntled worker explained that he had put in the work and therefore should be paid regardless.
At one point during the confrontation, the shop owner made an obscene display, grabbing his private area, as he walked towards the truck. The worker noted that the man probably expected him to be intimidated, but he remained unmoved. After pacing back and forth, the shop owner picked up a hose and sprayed water into the worker’s truck.
Public Outrage Over Labor Abuse And Call For Legal Recourse
Delaware Netizens stormed the comment section, demanding that the shop owner be held accountable for the worker’s immigration status to avoid financial obligation. One user expressed immediate disgust, linking the incident to a broader global political disruption: “This is absolutely terrible! Trump has unleashed chaos upon the world!” Another attributed the shop owner’s actions to what they defined as a common behavior among right-wing followers, claiming that they mirror their leader’s deception, fraud, and theft.
An individual bluntly stated that the very presence of the Immigration agency allows Republicans to perpetrate exploitation and financial theft without fear, while this fed-up user advocated for economic retaliation, urging the community to boycott the business, hitting the owner where it mattered the most: his financial profits. A defiant netizen advised, “These white people better start learning to paint, build roofs, etc., because people are gonna refuse to work for demons like this.” A sharp critic tagged the business owner ridiculous and mocked the financial desperation of the business owner, calling out the hypocrisy of using immigration intimidation tactics to cover up his inability to pay for the worker’s labor.
An observer sarcastically summarized the situation as an ultimatum, demanding uncompensated work under the explicit threat of incarceration. A last user offered actionable legal guidance, stating that the affected employees should submit a formal wage theft grievance to the Delaware Department of Labor. They explained that the agency aggressively pursues such issues.
The reactions to the Delaware incident highlight a growing refusal among the digital community to tolerate the weaponization of immigration status in corporate settings. Ultimately, the reactions reinforce the boundary that threats of deportation should not override basic human dignity or nullify the absolute requirement of paying a worker for their time and energy.







