IN Little Elm Resident Faces Doxxing Over Video, Stirring H-1B Visa And Community Concerns - “I grew up riding my bike all across town, and loved it. It was great, amazing. Basically an ‘80s childhood,” Keene said. “My daughter’s riding her bike around, and it’s kind of weird. The road’s blocked, they’re worshiping Ganesh and beating drums.”

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Logan Washburn - Staff Writer | Metroplex
Sep 16, 2025

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Indian festival blocking the streets in Keene's neighborhood Video screenshot, video posted by RedWave Press @RedWave_PressX; H-1B is a visa in the United States Image by Pritha_EasyArtsShutters

When the owner of a coffee shop in Little Elm expressed frustration about an Indian festival blocking the streets in his neighborhood, he faced significant backlash, including numerous negative reviews and even an extortion attempt.

Daniel Keene, owner of Boundaries Coffee in Little Elm, posted a video of an Indian festival in his neighborhood on September 6 showing crowds blocking the street, with loud drums in the background.

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The post sparked outrage online, with The Times of India and The Hindustan Times covering Keene’s remarks, with some Facebook groups calling him racist and others putting a call out to support the coffee shop and its owner, who reportedly has been doxxed.

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Threats began arriving in the afternoon of September 7 and continued throughout the night, Keene told The Dallas Express. “At 3 a.m. I’m getting taunting messages like, ‘I see you’re awake,’ ‘We’re coming for you,’ ‘Take your business down.’”

Meanwhile, online accounts he referred to as “bots” began leaving negative reviews about his coffee shop.

At one point, someone tried extorting him – threatening to share his business profile with 6 million Indian Americans unless he paid $20,000.

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Keene said he only posted the video for his followers and never expected it to go viral. However, it quickly gained momentum, accumulating more than 1.7 million views in a single repost.

A priest at Shirdi Sai Samsthan in Texas, a nearby Hindu temple in Little Elm, told The Dallas Express he feels the neighbors were not doing anything wrong. He declined to provide his name.

“That is a small festival they are celebrating. Maybe the person sitting in the car is getting late to go to work or something, or maybe for some reason he is frustrated,” he said. “We have to respect others, and we have to be friendly with others, maybe a little bit of patience.”

Keene denied allegations of racism and said his concern lies with the H-1B visa program bringing in such a large volume of foreign residents all at once.

“I’m not racist,” Keene said. “I simply oppose the policy and its effects that it’s having on my community.”

A Changing Landscape

Keene grew up in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, but moved when he went to college. He got married and moved back with his wife in 2021 to escape the “chaos of the world.” They found a house in Little Elm.

“Met some cool people on our street, and neighbors, and really enjoyed the community,” he said. “I was surprised when I came back, how diverse everything was. Specifically, how large the Indian population was in the area.”

Keene said he had a community of neighbors and friends on the street, and didn’t initially think much of the growing Indian population.

While he still has “really good friends” who are Indian, Keene said it became more difficult to develop a community.

“I grew up riding my bike all across town, and loved it. It was great, amazing. Basically an ‘80s childhood,” Keene said. “My daughter’s riding her bike around, and it’s kind of weird. The road’s blocked, they’re worshiping Ganesh and beating drums.”

In nearby Celina ISD, the Indian language Telugu surpassed Spanish as the second-most spoken vernacular this summer
, according to the Celina Record.

“We really desperately want our kids to grow up in a similar place that we grew up in,” Keene said.

The Hindu priest expressed gratitude to America for its opportunities and called to “respect everyone’s religious practices.”

“They have to follow the law of the land, and this person also has to welcome the neighbors,” the priest said. “He has to respect the neighbors because they are living in the same neighborhood.”

H1-B Visa Concerns

Some of Keene’s friends lost opportunities in the tech sector, which he attributed to the high number of H-1B visas. As The Dallas Express reported, a recent survey found 56% of Americans feel the visa system creates unfair competition.

“I’m seeing the effect of the policy, specifically on the use of this visa, and just the sheer numbers of it hurting my friends,” Keene said.

H-1B visas are different from green cards – lasting for up to 6 years, allowing U.S. companies to temporarily hire foreign workers in specialty fields that usually require a bachelor’s degree. They can, however, create a pathway to green cards, which are indefinite.

Indian nationals hold 72% of H-1B visas, while Chinese nationals hold 12%. As The Dallas Express reported, Texas companies, including Cognizant Technology, Oracle America, and Tesla, employ a large number of these visa holders.

“We came from India, we started working here. The land has given opportunities, and we are respecting the law of the land,” the Hindu priest said. “We have to work together for the good world, the peace of the world.”

“Nobody is stealing anybody’s opportunity. Here, the only thing is who are eligible,” he added.

The DFW area had the second-highest number of H-1B visa approvals in America – 74,000 – from 2010 to 2016, bested only by the New York City metroplex, according to Pew Research. In 2024, the federal government approved 400,000 applications nationwide.

“I sincerely have all the affection in the world for Indians,” Keene said. “I think maybe it’s just too much at one time.”

Keene expressed concern about the H-1B program’s economic and cultural implications. “DFW is kind of one major homogeneous culture to me, like a town.”

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“We came from India, we started working here. The land has given opportunities, and we are respecting the law of the land,” the Hindu priest said.
You know, a Festival like that that blocks streets sounds like something that might require a permit, since it's blocking streets. I'm sure the shit golem pajiggers made sure to do all that, they'd never just ignore local laws and all that. It really should be legal to physically correct Jeets when ever they engage in Jeetery.
 
“They have to follow the law of the land, and this person also has to welcome the neighbors,” the priest said. “He has to respect the neighbors because they are living in the same neighborhood.”
I don't respect any migrant who not only disregards the local laws but acts as if they're above the law and its citizens. Especially when these people leave their own shit in the street and being a total nuisance to society.
 
The Hindu priest expressed gratitude to America for its opportunities and called to “respect everyone’s religious practices.”

Yeah the only religious practices he wants respected are his.
 
The “we used to ride our bikes around here and now they’re worshipping Ganesh” thing is simultaneously funny and horrifying.
It's brown people celebrations and they have tons of them.
The guy is probably having the worst sleep in his life. It's going to get worse once they discover fireworks or guns.
 
A priest at Shirdi Sai Samsthan in Texas, a nearby Hindu temple in Little Elm, told The Dallas Express he feels the neighbors were not doing anything wrong. He declined to provide his name.
I love how the priest, who says that his fellow Indians didn't do anything wrong by doxing the coffee shop owner, wants to stay anonymous.
 
Their reaction to being called savages that need to be removed is to show just how savage they are and how badly they need to be removed. I say remove every last one from the country, "legal", "citizen", or otherwise. The only "Indians" that belong in the US are the ones who live on reservations.
 
Their reaction to being called savages that need to be removed is to show just how savage they are and how badly they need to be removed. I say remove every last one from the country, "legal", "citizen", or otherwise. The only "Indians" that belong in the US are the ones who live on reservations.
I've disliked Jeets for well over a decade, before it was cool, and I'm still shocked at their complete lack of self-awareness. Honestly, I think Africans are more likely to behave like reasonable human beings, Jeets are like an entire race of low IQ, high time preference, low functioning sociopaths who are only not violent because they're utterly pathetic physically. Skaven but more pathetic, for a fiction reference.
 
"Indians rhythms sound like they are lost in a drum trying knock on a door that isn't there." - Dr. Matthew C. Harris
 
There's only a small handful of things that make my autism rage and put me on the cusp of a spack attack. One is theft, I fucking 1hate thieves, I'm all for chopping hands and hangings, I don't fucking care, stop touching shit that isn't yours. Another, is blocking streets; I've been called a grinch and said some fed posty shit IRL; because to help stop diversity Americans from following and looting, the local Toys for Tots people will block entire neighborhoods to pass out toys. And these aren't uniformed police in marked cars, they're volunteers, usually bikers. Imagine rolling up to two guys saying "You can't come down this street," because they're passing out toys. Fuck those kids, fuck you, and I'll fucking dump all your fucking bikes, I fucking live here you inbred Grateful Dead rejects.

So there's only one fucking answer to this jeet menace. Burn their fucking homes down and drive them out of the area. I don't care, fuck you, don't block the road unless you want to fucking die.
 
At one point, someone tried extorting him – threatening to share his business profile with 6 million Indian Americans unless he paid $20,000
Oh no, the clientele will be less smelly and noisy, how terrible to business.
we are respecting the law of the land,” the Hindu priest said.
Not the traffic laws.
 
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