I agree. He was mean to someone & made the dumb decision to share his recorded actions with other people on the Internet, but at the end of the day, he didn't kill anyone or hurt anyone physically, and he still has 4 kids and a wife to support, so should he be punished forever & ever for that? At the end of the day, he made some (really) bad decisions. It sounds like he's learned his lesson - he still holds to his point-of-view, but regrets the way he expressed them.
Was doing what he did at the drive through his worst moment ever or just a typical bad moment for him?
If worst moment ever then it's pretty bad luck. Typical bad moment still pretty bad luck given all the bad folks out there who don't get much fallout for their poor behavior.
The family side of this guys life makes the result hard to be proud of. Though obviously you can't hire the guy without expecting his fallout to hit your business bottom line.
Well, he videoed it and uploaded it of his own accord, so I have to conclude he was OK with what he did, and even expected support for it. This is not "bad luck".
Bad luck is when you had a terrible day at work, your father is dying, your dog ran away, and when you hit the drive-thru the employee mangles your order and you have to repeat it three times, then because you're at your breaking point you say "Dude, you're a complete idiot" at the window, and the complete idiot uploads the video that you didn't even know was being taken.
It might depend on what kind of jobs he is looking for. If I have to wonder if hes learned from his mistake I am probably not going to have him be my CFO. AR\AP drone maybe but not CFO
What a ridiculous overreaction from poor persecuted Christians. It was kind of stupid and I don't know what he was trying to accomplish by videotaping a fast food worker, but it's not like he went there and started yelling in her face, cursing at her, calling her a retard, acting aggressive, making threats, and so on.
Seriously, I've never understood this.
He did a dumb thing, but I don't think the "punishment" fits the "crime".
I'm all for private activities being separate from work. But once the bomb threats come in, then my private activities are effecting the ability of my company to function, and I'm an insurance liability, which means it's in the financial best interests of my company to let me go.
What should ALSO happen is that anybody who made a bomb threat or sent a threatening email/voicemail, should be brought up on terrorism charges. But that'll never happen.
...and since his act seems like a blatant attempt at attention-whoring, that would make you wonder if the claimed "threats" are exaggerated sensationalism. Can't really know for sure, but it makes you wonder.
His employer fired him without hesitation. I don't think Christians did that to him.