Skip to main content

Podcaster compares being asked to wear a mask to RAPE as he tears into innocent staff at a Sydney café while saying he has an asthma exemption

A Christian podcaster has filmed himself abusing staff at a Sydney café after being asked to wear a mask in a bizarre tirade comparing the health directive to rape. 

Dominic Karnaby stormed into Bespoke and Grind, in Marrickville, on Saturday without a face mask, which are mandatory in public indoor settings as the locked-down city battles a Covid outbreak.

A sign by the till requests customers wear masks before entering the coffee shop, which is one of several restrictions cast over businesses by state health authorities to ensure regulations are followed. 

But despite the protocol, Karnaby flew into an irrational rage when asked why he was not masked, and launched a blistering attack accusing a waitress of 'intimidation' before posting footage of the confrontation on Instagram.

'Excuse me, do you have a mask on you?' a waitress asks politely in the clip, before requesting Karnaby step outside.  

The religious blogger hectors the hospitality worker, questioning her authority to enforce the rule before claiming he has a medical exemption.

'Who are you, sorry?' Are you the government? No. Are you the police? No,' he hounds. 

'I have an exemption! So just know your rights, but also know that I have rights as well. I have asthma, I have a breathing complication so I can't wear a mask.'

Standing behind the register, the owner tries to calm the hostile patron down, but her repeated efforts to softly interject by uttering 'excuse me' are ignored. 

'If someone is being raped do you go and tell them that they are not allowed to feel those feelings that they are being raped and abused by somebody?' Karnaby said as his rant continued. 

'This should be a safe space for everybody and I am not going to stand for it.

'Some of these muppets over here might tolerate it, but not me, my friend.'   

The cafe's owner calmly tried to de-escalate the situation, but Karnaby continued to rant at workers, accusing them of 'intimidation'

The cafe's owner calmly tried to de-escalate the situation, but Karnaby continued to rant at workers, accusing them of 'intimidation'

A second video showed Karnaby continuing to berate the staff, accusing them of 'intimidation' and threatening to make them 'go viral' after the owner calmly explained his reaction was not warranted. 

'Excuse me, all you needed to say was ''I have an exemption". That's all,' she explains. 

Karnaby said:  'You need to get that guy into line, it is disgusting how he just treated me.

'The intimidation needs to stop. Do you want to go viral? You are already going to.' 

Karnaby, who appeared to have his phone out ready to film before he was asked by to comply with the mask rule, shared the footage over his social media account later that evening, claiming he was the victim of 'bullying'. 

'This my friends is the gold class standard of how the free are being treated in a Covid-normal world this has gotta stop!' he wrote.

'It’s ok to be exempt it's ok to know your rights and not be bullied out of a café.' 

Karnaby appeared to already have his phone out filming a sign at the Marrickville cafe's register (pictured) moments before the confrontation

Karnaby appeared to already have his phone out filming a sign at the Marrickville cafe's register moments before the confrontation 

The webseminar host urged his followers to 'down' the store's rating and said he wanted to 'see them closed for this level of discrimination'. 

Under NSW health regulations, residents must wear face masks on public transports and in non-residential indoor settings, with breaches attracting a $200 fine. 

The public health order includes exemptions such as having a physical or mental health illness or condition, or disability, that makes wearing a mask unsuitable. 

Days before lockdown, workplace advisory Employsure informed businesses they would need to 'set the standard and ensure all staff, customers, and clients abide by new regulations to protect from the latest Covid cluster', which now stands at 242.

'These affected businesses, particularly those in Sydney, cater to hundreds, if not thousands of customers and workers each day,' Emplosure Health and Safety manager Larry Drewsen said in a statement. 

'Employers must remain vigilant over the next week and realise the responsibility falls directly on them.' 

Karnaby runs the Drayk Podcast show, which features him interviewing 'successful business owners, to pastors and actors about their faith and how it helps them revolutionise around them', according to the program's Spotify description. 

He also uses his talk show to spruik his 'anti-lockdown' sentiment, and frequently shares anti-mask posts with his 2,000 Instagram followers.  

Bespoke and Grind declined to comment to Daily Mail Australia about the incident over the weekend and Karnaby is yet to respond.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

EXCLUSIVE: From a $US13million mansion to a caravan: How the Australian wife of Il Divo singer has been 'forced' to live in a dodgy trailer park after a wildfire burned down their house during a bitter divorce battle

'Forced' into a 'mobile home park': Renee Izambard (nee Murphy) with her estranged husband, the suave Il Divo opera singer Sebastien Izambard An Il Divo opera singer's estranged Australian wife claims she was 'forced' to live in a caravan park after their $US12.95million Malibu mansion burned down in a wildfire days just after she filed for divorce.  Details of one-time Sydney Sony Music executive Renee Izambard's new life after her messy split with French tenor Sebastien Izambard were laid bare in a lawsuit filed with a Californian court this week. Ms Izambard (nee Murphy) is suing insurer State Farm, her estranged husband, an insurance agent and up to 20 others, over an allegedly 'inadequate' policy which covered the couple's destroyed former Malibu home.  Their five bedroom residence - described as a 'no expense spared ... oasis' - and its two guest houses went up in flames on November 8, 2018 during California's devastating Wo...

Heartbroken mother warns other parents after her two-year-old daughter swallows remote control battery and dies

A heartbroken mother has issued a warning to other parents after her two-year-old daughter died from swallowing a remote control battery.  Harper-Lee Fanthorpe, from Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, passed away on May 23, hours after swallowing the battery when the acid inside burnt through her food pipe. Mother Stacey Nicklin said she did not realise her daughter had swallowed the battery until she found the remote control with a missing button battery in her bedroom.  Harper-Lee Fanthorpe, from Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, passed away on May 23, hours after swallowing the battery when the acid inside burnt through her food pip Mother Stacey Nicklin said she did not realise her daughter had swallowed the battery until she found the remote control with a missing button battery in her bedroom The two-year-old was being watched over by her older sister, Jamie-Leigh Nicklin-Hulme  She recalled her daughter's final words to her were: 'Mummy, I need you'.  The two-year-old was b...

'Dishonest': Hugely popular mattress brand Koala is slammed for moving its manufacturing to China despite boasting on its website that products are 'made in Australia, for Australia'

Much-loved Australian mattress brand Koala has been slammed after announcing it will be moving production to China.   The bedding company said it was moving manufacturing of its popular mattresses to support its growth in Asian markets. The move will result in just one of 13 Koala items being produced domestically for a company which prides itself on its Australian-made mattresses. The signature product is described on the company's website as 'made in Australia, for Australia'. The Sydney-based company came under fire from Australian businessman and Harvey Norman executive chairman Gerry Harvey, who said the company was 'dishonest'. Harvey Norman boss Gerry Harvey (pictured with his wife Katie Page) has slammed Koala's decision to relocate manufacturing of its popular mattresses to China Koala also touts itself as an ethical and sustainable company which is a big supporter of protecting Australian wildlife and the environment.  'Anyone selling imported matt...