Bollywood Pizza House Frisco Targeted Repeatedly

Bollywood Pizza House Frisco restaurant exterior

A couple of YouTubers recently tasted attention and quick fame after visiting a few homes in the Dallas-Texas area, pointing cameras at them and branding H1B consulting companies as frauds and scams. That attention seems to have encouraged them to go further.

Their latest target was an Indian-owned restaurant, Bollywood Pizza House in Frisco, Texas. They walked into the restaurant with cameras rolling, started recording without consent, and fired questions as if they were legal authorities. They then uploaded those videos online for engagement, casually labelling the business as a scam.

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The bigger question is simple. Who gave them the right to judge or brand anyone a fraud? No court examined the case. No legal authority verified documents. No official agency confirmed any wrongdoing. None of that happened.

What is happening instead is far more disturbing. These people act like vultures, targeting small Indian businesses that are already struggling to survive. They know these owners cannot easily afford lawyers in the U.S. They invade private spaces, harass owners and destroy mental peace, all for views and clicks.

What makes it worse is their complete lack of understanding of how H1B consulting firms actually operate. They storm into offices or restaurants and repeatedly ask where the H1B workers are, without knowing that consultants do not need to work from a specific physical location. Remote work and client-site deployment are standard practices. Their lack of knowledge does not stop them from making serious accusations.

This kind of behaviour is deeply sad and dangerous. Walking into private property with cameras, threating staff, and publicly calling businesses frauds without proof is not activism. It is harassment.

It is unfortunate that many small Indian businesses feel helpless in these situations. But this needs to stop. Someone needs to take legal action on these folks and set a clear example. Intruding into private property, recording without consent, and defaming businesses online cannot be normalised under the excuse of social media content.

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