Should You Call Out People Who Cut You in Starbucks Drive-Thru?

A half-Mexican, half-white woman says a typical argument over cutting in line at a Houston Starbucks drive-thru turned racial when an older white man told her to “go back where you came from.” 

Michelle Cox (@michellecox444) posted the tense encounter on TikTok in a seven-minute clip. She says the moment locked a feeling she’d had for months, a feeling backed by troubling actual data. What she experienced was the growing reality that people of color are being told, implicitly and explicitly, that open racism is acceptable again.

Older White Woman Cuts In Line at Houston Starbucks

Cox says that she was waiting in a Starbucks drive-thru line in Texas when a woman in another car cut in front of her. She flagged her down to let her know where the end of the line was.

The woman got out from in front of Cox, but cut off the other five cars behind her. Cox repeatedly tried to tell the woman there was a line behind her while smiling through her closed window, but the woman refused to move. This set Cox off.

“I’m nice about it until you’re an [expletive], and then I’m gonna be an [expletive] back,” she said.

Things Escalate Quickly

Then, it gets a little out of hand. After repeated attempts to get the woman to move back, Cox was met with escalating hostility. The woman’s passenger, an older white man, began cursing at Cox. He then told her to “go back where you came from.”

Cox responded bluntly, identifying herself as American, from California, and calling him out as a racist. 

“I’m from the [expletive] United States. I’m from California,” she continued. “So [expletive] off, you white racist [expletive]. Because you know what? I’m not gonna let someone speak to me like that—or [let them] think it’s OK and get away with talking like that to people—because of the color of my skin.”

Of course, there was a nosy bystander who had exited the Starbucks and initially told Cox to get back in her car, assuming she was the problem. Cox and another driver in line explained what had actually happened, and he apologized. The woman who cut in line eventually pulled forward out of the way of the other cars. 

When Cox finally ordered her drink, the person ahead of her in the drive-thru had paid for it—an anonymous act of solidarity she found meaningful.

Open Xenophobia: It’s Not an Isolated Experience

Cox then reflected on the experience more broadly, connecting it to the political climate.

“Obviously, people think it’s OK to do this and say this to people, because why?” she asked. “Because our administration and other people make it seem like it’s OK to racially profile people and say [expletive] like this publicly, which they probably would never do in the past.”

She expressed concern about what this kind of casual, public racism means for people who are visibly immigrants or who don’t have the same ability to argue, “I’m from here.” She framed the experience not as an isolated rudeness problem but as a symptom of a culture in which racism has been given a green light.

“I’m half Mexican, half white. My dad’s from Tennessee,” she said. “I can’t imagine if that would have been someone who actually wasn’t from here and [was] told that. Like, people are being told that as of right now.”

One commenter, someone who knows or is familiar with Cox, sympathized with her. 

“I hate that this happened to you,” they wrote. “You are literally one of the most kindest, selfless humans I know. This world is filled with so much hate. It’s literally disgusting. I can’t stand that they’re going by the color of people[‘s] skin. It literally disgust[s] me. But thank you [for] standing up and saying something because I can’t stand people that think they can just do whatever they want.”

What the Data Says About Rising Racism

According to Axios’s reporting, “Guardrails against racist, xenophobic or dehumanizing rhetoric have all but vanished on the American right. What was once disqualifying” for public figures is now a regular feature of national political discourse.

Axios even noted points in recent history where consequences for being racist were real. The outlet noted that even during Trump’s first term, Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa) found himself in grave political peril in 2019 after a problematic interview with The New York Times. King was censured and removed from committees for questioning why terms such as “white nationalist” and “white supremacist” had become offensive.

PBS NewsHour reported that after the 2024 election, “there was a spike in incidents involving neo-Nazi marches and racist messages, with Black, Latino, and LGBTQ+ Americans in at least 25 states subjected to racist text messages.”

The Trump administration’s recharging of DHS/ICE has militarized race in a new way. Though the dragnet has changed to include a greater base, a UCLA analysis “found that Latinos accounted for nine out of ten ICE arrests during the first six months of 2025,” with arrests nearly doubling during Trump’s first 100 days.

“The data reveal a clear and troubling pattern,” said Paul Ong, Director of UCLA’s Luskin School of Public Affairs’ Center for Neighborhood Knowledge. “Arrests in Latino communities have increased sharply without any evidence linking many of these arrests to higher crime levels. This indicates that ICE operations during Trump’s second term are largely driven by political and demographic targeting rather than just targeting the ‘worst of the worst.’”

Given that racism has essentially become the official doctrine and therefore largely without consequence, it’s understandable why a white man could play fast and loose with phrases like “go back where you came from.”

AllHipHop reached out to Cox via TikTok comment and direct message and to Starbucks via email. We will update this article upon response.

@michellecox444 Story time about racist ass people. #houston #cypresstx #zyxcba #fyp #michellecox444 ♬ original sound – Michelle Cox

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