Fired Texas Healthcare Worker’s Fundraiser Nears $100,000 After Viral Store Clash With Muslim Woman [VIDEO]

Dasha Kilpatrick Fundraiser Nears $100,000 After Viral Grocery Store Clash

A fundraiser for Texas healthcare worker Dasha Kilpatrick is moving fast. In just two days, the GiveSendGo campaign had brought in more than $86,000 from over 2,200 donors. The goal is now $100,000.

Kilpatrick is 25 and worked as a medical massage therapist and holistic practitioner at Massage Forest/Inner Light Holistic Healing in the Conroe area. She was fired after a video of a confrontation at a grocery store went viral and drew accusations of racism.

The clip shows Kilpatrick making blunt comments about Islam, America, and Muslim immigrants. It does not show how the exchange started or what led up to the argument. That missing context has become a major part of the debate around the footage.

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https://x.com/Suzierizzo1/status/2068209796226920603?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

As the video spread, reactions split hard. Some people defended Kilpatrick and said she was speaking uncomfortable truths. Others called it blatant harassment and Islamophobic abuse. The backlash also brought doxxing, threats, and the loss of her job.

The fundraiser, titled “Stand with brave Texas healthcare worker,” was launched by Tom Hennessey. He has built a reputation for turning viral cancellation stories into huge GiveSendGo totals. He posted an update after the campaign blew past its first goal.

“We’ve passed the 50k goal in 9 hours, thank you!
Now onto 100k! https://t.co/fM8Zi9Axls”

https://x.com/Tomhennessey69/status/2068854610669019543?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Hennessey’s name is already tied to other major online fundraising drives. One of the biggest was for Shiloh Hendrix in Minnesota, whose case went viral after a playground confrontation. That campaign pulled in more than $841,000. Another was for Crystal Wilsey, a Cinnabon employee in Wisconsin, after a viral customer dispute. That effort raised well over $100,000.

In response to questions about why he keeps launching these campaigns, Hennessey gave a stark answer.

“America is a White country by its founding and heritage. Non-Whites are growing increasingly arrogant and ungrateful; they’ve overstayed their welcome, and I stand with the patriots calling them out,” Hennessey said.

For now, Kilpatrick’s fundraiser keeps climbing. The video is still circulating. And the fallout from one store confrontation is now turning into a bigger fight over speech, identity, and how far online punishment should go.

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