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Should employees be fired for refusing service over politics? THIS Subway flag row divides Australia

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Should employees be fired for refusing service over politics? THIS Subway flag row divides Australia

  • Maan
  • By Maan
1758683492998.png Should employees be fired for refusing service over politics? THIS Subway flag row divides Australia
Brisbane Subway incident sparks nationwide political debate. Image source: TikTok/becfreedom89.16

Content warning: This article contains offensive language and references to political extremism.



A Brisbane Subway became an unexpected flashpoint for Australia’s simmering political tensions.



What started as a simple lunch order quickly turned into a viral confrontation that has sparked nationwide debate.




On 31 August 2024, a Subway employee refused to serve customers carrying Australian flags, telling them the flag 'p***** me off' and calling them names too offensive to print in a family publication.



The exchange was filmed and shared widely, costing the worker her job and igniting debate over discrimination, workplace conduct, and political expression.





The customers had just attended the 'March for Australia' rallies, a series of protests across Australian cities that day.



Organisers framed the events as community concern about immigration policy, but critics and experts described them as far-right and white nationalist.



An ABC News investigation linked rally organisers to Neo-Nazi groups, including the National Socialist Network, whose leader Thomas Sewell spoke at the Melbourne rally.





'Nothing could be less Australian.'

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke on the March for Australia rallies



Brett Sengstock, 33, attended the Brisbane march and decided to test the Subway employee after hearing reports of a similar incident.



The confrontation escalated quickly.



When asked why she refused service, the employee said bluntly: 'Because that flag p***** me off.'



She added: 'You've got a Union Jack flag and the people organising this are Nazis. They said bring the Eureka flag, which is white nationalism. This is black land.'



The worker continued, calling customers offensive names and saying: 'Australia does not f****** exist.'



Sengstock’s response, 'What's in your brain?' reflected the bewilderment felt by many viewers of the footage.




Australia's current immigration settings


Australia's permanent migration program was set at 185,000 places for 2024-25, down from 190,000 the previous year.


The skilled stream made up 71 per cent of this allocation (132,200 places).


Recent changes increased student visa fees to $2,000 and introduced stricter financial and English requirements.





Subway acted swiftly, confirming the employee had been terminated.



A company spokesman said: 'The conduct of the individual involved does not reflect the values or standards of Subway. The safety, dignity and comfort of every guest is paramount, and we do not tolerate discrimination, harassment or aggression of any kind.'




What this means for workers and businesses



  • Employees can hold personal political views but cannot discriminate in service delivery

  • Businesses must provide equal service regardless of customers' political affiliations

  • Workers can be dismissed for conduct that breaches anti-discrimination policies

  • Companies have a duty to maintain a welcoming environment for all customers




The incident occurred amid heightened tensions in Australian communities.



Influencers and community leaders had urged certain groups to stay home for safety, and social media posts warned of a 'dangerous' anti-immigration message on 31 August.



The government condemned the protests as 'Un-Australian.'



Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said: 'You're speaking to someone called Albanese. We've got a Senate leader called [Penny] Wong. Migration enriches. Except for the First Australians, we're all either migrants or descendants of them.'




The Scanlon Foundation’s late-2024 survey found social cohesion at a record low.



While most Australians support non-discriminatory immigration policies, anti-immigration attitudes correlated with economic and housing concerns rather than diversity issues, with 49 per cent believing immigration levels were too high.



Experts called common myths about migrants 'nonsense,' noting that fear of being left behind drives much of the sentiment.



The Subway incident reflects the challenge of navigating political polarisation in everyday life.



For older Australians, the episode may feel especially disconcerting, recalling a time when political debate was more civil and workplaces had clearer boundaries between personal beliefs and professional conduct.



What This Means For You


A Subway employee refused service to customers carrying Australian flags, an incident that quickly went viral and sparked widespread discussion.


The customers involved had attended far-right 'March for Australia' rallies, which were linked to Neo-Nazi groups, adding another layer of controversy to the confrontation.


In response, Subway terminated the employee and emphasised the importance of non-discrimination and ensuring the safety and comfort of all guests.


This episode highlights the growing political polarisation in Australia and the challenges businesses face in maintaining neutrality in everyday interactions.


For the audience, particularly those who have witnessed decades of social change, the incident may feel alarming—showing how political tensions can now enter even the most ordinary spaces, like a lunch counter, and prompting reflection on how civility and respect can be preserved in increasingly divided times.




The Subway flag incident highlights how political beliefs can quickly turn everyday interactions into heated confrontations.


A similar clash over free speech recently unfolded on national television, showing that disagreements over politics are not limited to workplaces or public spaces.


Exploring this story provides another perspective on how political expression can spark debate and controversy.



Read more: Former prime minister sparks fiery debate with TV host: 'We believe in free speech'





How do we maintain civility in public spaces when personal beliefs collide with professional duties and community tensions?

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Hello fellow SDC members....

Can anyone provide evidence of this Subway employee being Indigenous?

I expect to hear crickets....
or... see cricket bats!
 
Immediate dismissal.
Reference refusal.
No pay in lieu
Lifetime Ban from all stores
 
Definitely not. In WWI our soldiers were under British command, so fought under the Union Jack. In WWII, it was the red ensign.
 
This woman wants to play the role of a politician with an apron around her waist. Clearly she is bored with her job, and wanted to create political confrontation to stimulate her brain. She is rude and disrespectful to voice her political words on the premises of a business, that may now develop into negative public gossip. The woman obviously has no social life and does not know how to communicate in a civil manner. It's good that her face has been shown, so that other businesses think twice before employing low life, foul speaking, rude people like this woman. 🙏🦋
 
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Like telling you to F*** O**!!!
You are such a cool dood and everytime, you express your filthy and vicious rhetoric, you show up the person you realy are (and I could not give a dam).
I HAVE noticed you have such a facination or obsession with words associated with SHIT, i.e crap, arsehole, shitbag, Arseholesleazy. Such a vivid imagination (NOT).
 
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Like telling you to F*** O**!!!
Dear member mOiOz, how does Sherril54 respectful post, equal to your foul response that you have in your post. Have some respect, and if you feel comfortable using these kinds of words, get a mirror and say the same words to the mirror with a smile. Have an enjoyable evening. 🙏🦋
 
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Sounded like racism towards whites to me. Glad it wasn't tolerated or justified. Nor should it be!

Australia, including the flag, is for all of us....like ot or not.

For the record, even the "Indigenous" came from somewhere else....originally!
 
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Sounded like racism towards whites to me. Glad it wasn't tolerated or justified. Nor should it be!

Australia, including the flag, is for all of us....like ot or not.

For the record, even the "Indigenous" came from somewhere else....originally!
Well, they were here first that has been established.
 
Yes, she definitely should have been sacked!
 
i would not attend any rally of any kind. I value my life too much to be amongst idiots.
 
Dear member mOiOz, how does Sherril54 respectful post, equal to your foul response that you have in your post. Have some respect, and if you feel comfortable using these kinds of words, get a mirror and say the same words to the mirror with a smile. Have an enjoyable evening. 🙏🦋
Thank you 7777 that kind of language lowers the tone of the SDC.
 
This is all pretty silly - but the wider echoes are funny and interesting. For those above who didn't bother to read the article or even look at the TikTok image (a social media aggregator recently taken over by MAGA in the USA), the SUBWAY employee was a woman, not a man, she did use the c word and her questioner did also, but it was not heated at all by either. According to this article, the videographers came in to check out a report from the earlier far right rally about service refusal, but the whole incident is not shown (or is edited). In what's left of the video, she did refuse service and did say AU doesn't exist. Nazis did address the rally. My unjabbed family was refused service at a restaurant during the mRNA lockouts in NSW and we didn't kick up this fuss. Sounds like they went there to create a fuss. It's up to SUBWAY as to whether she be sacked or not, or whether refusal of service and use of a widely used obscenity breaches unfair dismissal laws. Amusingly, what's not mentioned in the article is that the SUBWAY sandwich has become a symbol of resistance against ICE and Trump in Washington DC. Did this have a bearing on the whole exchange? https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/27/feds-indictment-grand-jury-sandwich-thrower-trump-dc.html
 
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Thousands of people did not die under any flag! So what! The point is that thousands - actually hundreds of thousands - DID die fighting to protect the Australian way of life. And millions have committed to doing so if it was necessary, but were fortunate enough to not have to.
Please show some respect for them. Leave the country if you don't like what it stands for. The descendants of the men and women who built this nation and fought for it deserve respect and to inherit what their forefathers bequeathed them. Tragically, thanks to a Communist PM and a team of Marxist and radical immoral supporters, I fear for future generations. It's time for all who love this country to stand to defend it against the evil that now threatens.

I actually have some sympathy for the sacked employee. It's entirely possible he - like so many others - has been indoctrinated by the power-crazed evil mob a small minority of deluded or corrupt Australians have put in power.
Ok…let me recap on these comments (based on the one sided account of events) - so a fast-food worker is rude to a customer who attended a protest linked to neo-Nazi groups, and naturally, the only logical conclusion is that it’s all the fault of a “Communist” Prime Minister leading a shadowy gang of corrupt, anti-Australian elites? Sure. That makes perfect sense. Not to mention the introduction of Indigenous Australians and Palestinians - relevant how?? Are you all still being treated for hysteria?
If you’ve got issues with immigration numbers, fair enough, that’s a policy debate. But dressing it up in nationalist cosplay and then acting outraged when people react badly? That’s just a performance! But, blaming Albanese for a fast-food employee’s attitude? Really? Calling him a Marxist mastermind is just… imaginative.
This kind of “everything I don’t like is communism” talk isn’t patriotic at all. It’s more like American Cold War Propaganda or Trump-ism. The idea that anyone questioning far-right movements is “anti-Australian” flips everything on its head. Democracy means people get to speak up...whether they're carrying a flag or calling out those who do. You don’t have to agree with the worker, but let’s not act like free speech only counts when it’s your opinion being voiced.
BTW, Veterans fought to defend our freedoms - not to force-feed some one-size-fits-all version of Australian identity. If anything is un-Australian, it’s silencing people for not toeing the nationalist line.
 
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This is all pretty silly - but the wider echoes are funny and interesting. For those above who didn't bother to read the article or even look at the TikTok image (a social media aggregator recently taken over by MAGA in the USA), the SUBWAY employee was a woman, not a man, she did use the c word and her questioner did also, but it was not heated at all by either. According to this article, the videographers came in to check out a report from the earlier far right rally about service refusal, but the whole incident is not shown (or is edited). In what's left of the video, she did refuse service and did say AU doesn't exist. Nazis did address the rally. My unjabbed family was refused service at a restaurant during the mRNA lockouts in NSW and we didn't kick up this fuss. Sounds like they went there to create a fuss. It's up to SUBWAY as to whether she be sacked or not, or whether refusal of service and use of a widely used obscenity breaches unfair dismissal laws. Amusingly, what's not mentioned in the article is that the SUBWAY sandwich has become a symbol of resistance against ICE and Trump in Washington DC. Did this have a bearing on the whole exchange? https://www.cnbc.com/2025/08/27/feds-indictment-grand-jury-sandwich-thrower-trump-dc.html
100%
 
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