Brands, may we remind you for the umpteenth time, that if you're trying to get #relatable on Twitter, you're opening yourself up to being completely and utterly owned.

People have a lot of strong feelings about when and where brands can interject their own witty repartee in online discourse. No matter how seemingly wholesome (woke soap, anyone?) or unbelievably tone deaf (Sunny D's faked mental health crisis), the response is usually a resounding SILENCE BRAND.

JPMorgan Chase was the latest brand to get shut down over a failed attempt at reaching the masses with a tweet that has since been deleted. However, the internet always keeps the receipts.

Hey, @Chase, why'd you delete this tweet where you tried to flex on poor people after taking a $12 billion dollar bailout? pic.twitter.com/dts1Q52CPs — kelly (on a rehab assignment) (@kellyawallace) April 29, 2019

People agreed that Chase had gone too far, trying to reach into the sensitive territory of people's personal finances all for the sake of the meme.

Along with mentioning Chase's fees which can often take advantage of its struggling customers, many were quick to point out that the Federal Reserve had to bail out JPMorgan Chase in 2008 to the tune of $25 billion.

Maybe they should have made their coffee at home.

Bank: Charges ridiculous overdraft fees if you transfer one minute late. -$35.00 — Jairo C (@jcarrillo83) April 29, 2019

Chase? Jp Morgan Chase? We had to be bailed out Chase? That chase? — Rob (@NexnecisUmbra) April 29, 2019

I use Chase, and don't generally have complaints about the service, but for this, you can fuck right off. You have several employees who should probably be in prison, and you continually keep getting caught and fined for corrupt practices. But hey, I should make coffee at home. — Teppec (@Teppec) April 29, 2019

When I was a high school student student you charged me a total of 700$ in fees in one year. — Philip (@philip) April 29, 2019

Thanks for sharing. Now return all my past overdraft fees. — Sir (@kurweezy_) April 29, 2019

This is definitely motivating me...



To seize the means of production. — grillcover (@bizarrojenkz) April 29, 2019

Send the CEO and board of every bank to a deserted island and leave them there to eat each other. — Rob Rainbolt (@Rob_Rainbolt) April 29, 2019

lol, as always, eat the rich — JazzFlight (@JazzFlight) April 29, 2019

This from a group that had to be bailed out to the tune of billions of dollars we funded because their balance was too low? Oh. — Tony 🌹 (@TweetKnick) April 29, 2019

Also bank: That'll be $4 for talking to a teller for the 3rd time this month. — 11 HOF, Self-Made Thrillionaire (@RealPLUTim) April 29, 2019

keep doing these please pic.twitter.com/JA8ffr8N18 — Brands Saying Bae (@BrandsSayingBae) April 29, 2019

Wells Fargo Bank: We are the most embarrassing big bank.



Chase Bank: Hold my beer. pic.twitter.com/QDGil5BWwH — Ivan the K™ (@IvanTheK) April 29, 2019

Hahahah Chase Bank right now pic.twitter.com/Yc7V3ahHpi — K! (@molotovmaz) April 29, 2019

no one:



seriously, not a single person:



no, but actually, not one human being on planet earth: @Chase: what if we dunked on millennials in their favorite meme format for being poor? lmao



eat a massive dong, chase bank pic.twitter.com/eezw5zonA1 — Nick Solheim (@NickSSolheim) April 29, 2019

Brands (and social media marketing managers) this is a learning experience for you all — don't dish it out if you can't take it. Or at least have the decency to actually be funny.

Mashable has reached out to JPMorgan Chase for comment.

UPDATE: April 29, 2019, 3:25 p.m. EDT After reaching out for comment, JPMorgan Chase responded by redirecting us to their most recent tweet below.

Our #MondayMotivation is to get better at #MondayMotivation tweets. Thanks for the feedback Twitter world. — Chase (@Chase) April 29, 2019

UPDATE: April 29, 2019, 4:07 p.m. EDT Even Senator Elizabeth Warren got in on the dunking with a tweet that mocked Chase's meme format.

.@Chase: why aren’t customers saving money?

Taxpayers: we lost our jobs/homes/savings but gave you a $25b bailout

Workers: employers don’t pay living wages

Economists: rising costs + stagnant wages = 0 savings

Chase: guess we’ll never know

Everyone: seriously?

#MoneyMotivation pic.twitter.com/WcboMr5MCE — Elizabeth Warren (@SenWarren) April 29, 2019

UPDATE: April 29, 2019, 5:19 p.m. EDT An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that the Federal Reserved bailed out Chase for $12 billion. The actual number is $25 billion.