According to the original poster’s Twitter account, he was taking his wife to McDonald’s to get the popular BTS meal when they happened upon the sign. “My wife just wanted a BTS meal, and I got a viral tweet in return,” he tweeted Monday night.

The photo of the sign quickly took off, with many people not only vocalizing their thoughts on the employee’s actions but also cracking jokes about the sign.

Upon first glance, it appears a lot of users were supportive of the employee’s bold decision.

“As someone who works at one, kudos to that person for standing up for themselves and getting out of that s*** show,” said one commenter in full support of the resignation.

“Can’t blame them, working in fast food really does suck,” commented another. “For all the crap we have to put up with isn’t worth the money we are paid.”

“Man, I would’ve loved to roll up and be like ‘YES GIRL YOU QUIT’ and then drive away into the night,” joked another.

But as people quickly began to flood the comments with their support and share their own experiences working in fast food, others were quick to argue that no amount of money could make someone “love” their fast food job.

“Underneath: AI will replace all of us because we are not willing to do the job we applied for,” said one commenter.

When one user made the argument that minimum wage isn’t a “liveable one,” one user responded: “There’s a difference between a startup job and a career.”

When someone rebuffed the tweet, another jumped in and said: “People that are responsible show up are accountable and take on additional responsibilit[ies] get paid more. Those that aren’t willing to do that, don’t. Pretty simple equation.”

But, debating aside, some just made jokes about the sign.

Asked one: “Why don’t they save us all the trouble and put up a sign saying their milkshake machine isn’t working?”

The tweet’s initial poster responded saying, the other week, the same McDonald’s did, in fact, do just that. However, the sign included multiple misspellings.

In another ice cream machine-related joke, another asked: “how did the ice cream machine type this?”

Employees all across the country are leaving their restaurant jobs. Just last month, those on Twitter shared photos of “we quit” or “understaffed” signs in a variety of restaurants, including Chipotle and Wendy’s.