Republican Donald Trump became the US president-elect early Wednesday morning, a result that surprised many as most polls had given Democrat Hillary Clinton a greater chance of winning even as the race tightened.

Now that a Trump presidency is imminent, however, people on Twitter — especially Muslim-Americans and Latinos — are reporting hate speech and hate crimes they're attributing to Trump supporters.

Shaun King, a reporter for the New York Daily News, on Wednesday began writing on Twitter about instances of hate speech people said they had allegedly experienced. You can see a few recent ones below.

Insanul Ahmed, a senior editor at the music website Genius, made another list, a Twitter Moments compilation, called "Day 1 in Trump's America." On Wednesday, the list updated every few minutes with new tweets describing what Ahmed described as "racist episodes POC are facing now that Trump is our President Elect."

A Medium post compiling similar reports, also called "Day 1 in Trump's America," was published Wednesday by Verge reporter and photographer Sean O'Kane.

The post's leading photo shows graffiti on a softball dugout wall that says "Make America White Again" and is next to a swastika. The photo was taken Wednesday by Brian Quinn, a journalist from the Wellsville Daily Reporter in Wellsville, New York.

Graffiti on a softball dugout in Wellsville, New York. Brian Quinn/Wellsville Daily Reporter/Screenshot

O'Kane linked to a story from The Syracuse Post-Standard, which reported that vandals burned rainbow flags (a symbol of the LGBT-rights movement) hanging from homes in western New York.

News outlets including Quartz and The Washington Post have started to report on similar issues as well, and the Southern Poverty Law Center is asking for people to send reports their way.

At the same time, people around the country are organizing and protesting to counter them.