This morning on The Breakfast Club, DJ Envy dropped a painfully hot take about stop and frisk, and Twitter isn't having it.

The radio show was discussing last night's presidential debate, during which Donald Trump lied that stop and frisk A) wasn't ruled unconstitutional and that B) it worked "very well."

After playing a clip from the debate, Charlamagne Tha God explains, "The truth to the matter is, man, there's twelve years of data that show in New York City stop and frisk just wasn't that effective."

DJ Envy countered that point, saying "No, it showed it took a lot of guns off the street"—Charlamagne chimes in that "No, it doesn't though"—"Now you can say it was only .1 percent." Switching to respond to Charlamagne's point, Envy asks, "What's 'not a lot of guns'? Nine-hundred guns off the street is 'not a lot of guns'?" Charlamagne fires back, "Where'd you get that number from?"

"In 2011, the last year that they did stop and frisk, they actually took, excuse me, 890 guns off the street," Envy says.

Angela Yee responded by saying that stop and frisk didn't really reduce any crime or keep anyone safer, as the Brennan Center also concluded.

While acknowledging that "one gun taken off the street is a great thing," Charlamagne says, "Overall, it was just an excuse for police officers to harass African-American and Hispanic people." (When it was ruled unconstitutional, the judge described stop and frisk as a "policy of indirect racial profiling.")

"In certain cases, yes, [but] in certain cases it was done to pull guns off the street," Envy fired back. He said that last year New York confiscated around 200 guns, compared to the almost 900 during stop and frisk.

Charlamagne then pointed out that the policy had been ruled unconstitutional—prompting Envy to jack one of Trump's lies and say that it actually wasn't (it was).

After some crosstalk, Angela Yee laid down the law: "The facts are that it really just wasn't that effective, period." When Envy tried to make his point about guns again, she clapped back, "Guns are found in less than .2 percent of stops," a stat confirmed by the ACLU.

Using logic similar to Trump Jr.'s Skittles analogy, Envy suggested that the small percentage is irrelevant: "You can say .2 [percent], but I'll take .2 of a billion dollars. Yes, 900 guns off the street, you can say it's only .2 percent, but 900 guns off the street is a lot of guns off New York City."

Angela Yee tries again to set Envy straight: "But for that .2 percent of stops they said that actually it [stop and frisk] was very intrusive to a lot of innocent people that were harassed by the police."

Envy defends the policy, saying that if it was applied more fairly across the board then it'd be all good. Angela Yee notes that in neighborhoods like Park Slope in Brooklyn, where blacks make up 24 percent of the population, 70 percent of the people stopped were African-Americans. Charlamagne added, "All stop and frisk did was give police officers who already wanna harass blacks and Hispanics a reason, lawfully, to harass blacks and Hispanics."

At that point, Angela Yee shifts the conversation to how widely-watched the debate was, and they ask for listeners to share their thoughts—and many did on Twitter.

Many thought Envy's arguments destroyed any credibility he had by being so out of touch with the community:

DJ Envy lost his HipHop pass yall... — Silver Tsunami ( @TsunamiSlim ) September 27, 2016

All DJ Envy knows is that he's in a different tax bracket now so he think certain things going on in the community doesn't apply to him SMH — Chalkey white ( @soursmoking ) September 27, 2016

DJ Envy - black person who grew up in the ghetto benefited from the culture, went to college and never turned back to help like so many do — lionorder ( @lionorder12 ) September 27, 2016

Dj envy doesn't have a problem with stop & frisk because him & his kids are out the ghetto. — Alina ( @alinathequeenx ) September 27, 2016

Some people in the black community told him to GTFO:

DJ Envy Is beyond ignorant how r u a minority supporting stop n frisk when It literally was designed 2 target minorities especially blk mans — SCR ( @Cassie_Xtassy ) September 27, 2016

DJ Envy doesn't understand and will never... from previous interviews he said his dad's a cop, and obviously he's not a black man!!! — RespectMyHustle ( @ResMyHustle ) September 27, 2016

DJ Envy thinks he qualifies for white privilege . — Muva Joyce ( @MsDeeJai ) September 27, 2016

DJ Envy supports Stop & Frisk… as a minority…. with minority children… in our current state… interesting. — Joe Budden ( @JoeBudden ) September 27, 2016

DJ Envy is only "black" when it comes time to make his money. — @the_darling1 ( @the_darling1 ) September 27, 2016

DJ Envy has to get the hee-haw for that. We all make mistakes, but he has to be shown the error of his ways. Help your brother out @cthagod — Charisse ✊ ( @Scandalous49 ) September 27, 2016

But DJ Envy has doubled down:

We def stop and frisking you... https://t.co/FQ60piX0OD — djenvy ( @djenvy ) September 27, 2016

And people are still pushing for Envy to be named the Donkey of the Day:

DJ Envy has to get the hee-haw for that. We all make mistakes, but he has to be shown the error of his ways. Help your brother out @cthagod — Charisse ✊ ( @Scandalous49 ) September 27, 2016

Charlemagne give DJ Envy donkey of the day — That Guy ( @KoolBazz ) September 27, 2016

Of course Charlamagne didn't give DJ Envy donkey. Guess Donkey of the Day does discriminate. — Buster Kaepernick ( @pingponglol22 ) September 27, 2016

But it looks like Charlamagne is gonna laugh it off: