Amazon got serious heat from users after some very questionable items were being sold on the site.

The hashtag #BoycottAmazon was trending on Twitter in India on Saturday, when users discovered doormats with images of Hindu gods and goddesses on the platform.

Amazon has since removed the doormats in question, according to Mashable.

People were upset at the retail giant for allowing the sale of items that place sacred symbols -- including images of the deities Shiva, Vishnu, Krishna and Ganesha -- on doormats, or that thing you use to wipe your dirty feet.

Tweeters were calling the products an insult to Hinduism and an abuse of the deities:

@amazon How can you sell door mats with religious icons of Hindus?Remove them immediately @amazonIN

#BoycottAmazon pic.twitter.com/ko2XKYvzYO — Sourish Mukherjee (@sourishVHP) June 4, 2016

@amazon Hv u gone nuts! this is sheer blasphemy! selling doormats n under garments with Hindu deities printed on them. #BoycottAmazon — ASHISH MANHAS (@ashish_manhas) June 6, 2016

Though many of the items called out were sold by a handful of sellers -- including “Rock Bull” and “Mr Kill Ganesha doormats” -- people were unified in the call to take down Amazon, as the retailer allowed the products to stay up on the site.

Some pointed out the discrepancy between allowing products that insult Hindu gods and goddesses, but not seeing everyday items like doormats or undergarments featuring Allah, Jesus or other religions' deities:

Imagine @Amazon selling "Prophet" undies. But they won't cuz they remember Charlie Hebdo shooting.#BoycottAmazon pic.twitter.com/7eUAKETfb3 — Sonam Mahajan (@AsYouNotWish) June 6, 2016

Yes #BoycottAmazon , it has fashion to defame Hindus and Hindu gods , don't have guts to do such things with others https://t.co/3pafFnc2UZ — MAHENDRA JAIN (@mahendra3) June 4, 2016

Most called for users to stop buying Amazon products and to uninstall the app:

#BoycottAmazon, Now! Uninstall the app and cancel the orders, let them feel the heat...rate the app at 1 star. pic.twitter.com/oodnIeltd8 — Govinda Zavar (@zGovinda) June 5, 2016

To @amazon We're not gonna buy your products, uninstall app, rate it to worst. we want you to apologies for disgrace Hinduism #BoycottAmazon — Anshul Saxena (@AskAnshul) June 4, 2016

But some criticized the #BoycottAmazon movement, stating that there were bigger issues to be enraged by:

Childish trend, #BoycottAmazon. Why just doormat, put gods on toilet paper, condoms. Our tradition, Hinduness too big to be belittled by it — Abhijit Majumder (@abhijitmajumder) June 4, 2016

Incredible India: Where losers hoping to #BoycottAmazon never get upset with honour killings and female infanticide in the name of religion. — lindsay pereira (@lindsaypereira) June 4, 2016

Though Amazon has reportedly removed many of the items called out on Saturday, people continue to point to other products they believe warrant a take-down:

Need to restart #BoycottAmazon @amazon needs to clean up its act

pls RT pic.twitter.com/Nwcvs1VNpY — No Conversion (@noconversion) June 6, 2016

Why did we stop pressurising @amazonIN by not continuing to trend #BoycottAmazon https://t.co/Twe8MswM6z — Manoj Hariharan (@manojhariharan) June 6, 2016

This is not the first time people have moved to boycott the retailer. In 2014, users called for a boycott after Amazon reportedly slowed the purchases of Hachette books on its platform, according to TIME, in order to pressure the publisher into letting them sell Hachette books at a lower price on the site.