Christian Dingus, 28, was with his partner when, he says, employees told the couple not to kiss inside, and the argument escalated outside.

A gay man accused a group of Washington, D.C., Shake Shack employees of beating him after he kissed his boyfriend inside the location while waiting for their order.

Christian Dingus, 28, was with his partner and a group of friends at a Dupont Circle location Saturday night when the incident occurred, he told NBC News. They had put in their order and were hanging around waiting for their food.

“And while we were back there — kind of briefly — we began to kiss,” Dingus said. “And at that point, a worker came out to us and said that, you know, you can’t be doing that here, can’t do that type of stuff here.”

The couple separated, Dingus said, but his partner got upset at the employee and insisted the men had done nothing wrong. Dingus’ partner was then allegedly escorted out of the restaurant, where a heated verbal argument occurred.

  • @kryptonianCodeMonkey
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    -1023 days ago

    I’ve said multiple times that the violence was not okay and there was no excuse for it. No matter how much pda happened. I have also said multiple times that they are absolutely not to blame for the violence assuming neither threw the first punch. I only suggested that he might have downplayed a single detail in his retelling about what caused the employee to talk to them in the first place.

    • EleventhHour
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      1023 days ago

      I’ve said multiple times that the violence was not okay and there was no excuse for it.

      yet you’re bending over backwards to make excuses for it

      • @kryptonianCodeMonkey
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        -623 days ago

        I really havent. Suggesting that the restaurant may have been justified I asking them to stop what they were doing is not excusing the violence even a little and it’s ridiculous for you to conflate the two things

        • EleventhHour
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          1023 days ago

          I really havent. Suggesting that the restaurant may have been justified I asking them to stop what they were doing is not excusing the violence

          when you invent excuses for bigoted violence that’s what you’re doing, especially if you have to completely invent the accusation that the victims were liars and, therefore, deserved it.

          THAT is what you keep doing, and your denials just make it more obvious how much trouble with the truth when you deny the things you’ve already said here for everyone to see.

            • EleventhHour
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              623 days ago

              Except even if I’m 100 percent right

              according to what evidence that you didn’t make up yourself?

              that still excuses nothing

              except you’re still here trying to excuse iit.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      623 days ago

      've said multiple times that the violence was not okay and there was no excuse for it. No matter how much pda happened. I have also said multiple times that they are absolutely not to blame for the violence assuming neither threw the first punch.

      Good.

      I only suggested that he might have downplayed a single detail…

      You just can’t stop adding to absolute ‘never’ and ‘not’ with additional bullshit.

      Let’s go back to your first post, which started:

      There is never a reason for either party to escalate a verbal disagreement to a physical one, but I would be very shocked if the PDA were as innocent as they imply it…

      You said the victims weren’t ‘as innocent’. You’re victim blaming. You can’t cover that up by starting with ‘not okay’, ‘no excuse’, and ‘not to blame’. You consistently follow on with words that EXPLICITLY MEAN “BUT they are not innocent and have some blame”.

      You talk like a politician. I can imagine you being on TV saying: “I respect childless women, however, they should vote like their father says”.

      Stop equivocating. If the violence was wrong, it was wrong. That’s it.

    • @jpreston2005
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      122 days ago

      You’re the kind of person that listens to a broken woman describe being the victim of domestic violence and ask “but what did you do to set him off?”

      The only thing evident about you and your line of thinking is resentment.