The internet holds nothing back when tasked with the responsibility of calling out a company for wrongdoing, especially when it comes to major airlines.

A shocking video of a man being forcibly removed from an over-booked United Airlines flight from Chicago to Louisville on Sunday sent the internet into full-blown WTF Mode by Monday morning. The disturbing footage showed a man being dragged from his seat, bloodied and confused, by law enforcement while other passengers protested.

The internet, of course, dealt with the upsetting video (and the seriousness of the issue) in the best way it knows how: memes and dark humor.

United Airlines is pleased to announce new seating on all domestic flights- in addition to United First and Economy Plus we introduce.... pic.twitter.com/KQjPClU2d2 — McNeil (@Reflog_18) April 10, 2017

united's list of special in-flight deals makes a lot more sense now pic.twitter.com/UvkRVFppKz — Bob Vulfov (@bobvulfov) April 10, 2017

Wow now is not the time United pic.twitter.com/VzCoL30xZA — Casey Newton (@CaseyNewton) April 10, 2017

DONT TAKE THE FREE FLIGHT! THEY WILL BEAT YOUR ASS AND TAKE YOUR NUGGS!!! https://t.co/dMg35ELHAX — Tony Posnanski (@tonyposnanski) April 10, 2017

“Welcome aboard. Oh, and we need some volunteers to be bumped.” -@United pic.twitter.com/jJsfbYEkbO — Dave (@nochiefs) April 10, 2017

United Airlines in-flight staff training video leaked. pic.twitter.com/9de0L0PlGJ — Alan Ferrier (@alanferrier) April 10, 2017

When you're on your @united flight and the plane starts to fill up pic.twitter.com/Y51L2TubDW — Kevin Toy (@CLG_PewPewU) April 10, 2017

To make matters worse, Reddit, aka the frontpage of the internet, found itself tied into the drama after moderators removed one of the clips from the r/videos subreddit, citing police brutality or harassment, as well as assault, all of which are against the rules of that specific subreddit. This prompted Redditors to post a string of video depicting United Airlines in an unfavorable fashion, flooding the entire r/videos subreddit in the process.

The clips ranged from videos of actual interactions with United Airlines to clips of comedies with sarcastic titles.

By Monday afternoon, the top 20 videos on r/videos were in someway related to the United Airlines video. Considering r/videos is a default sub, this is a huge deal.

Image: screenshot, reddit

And as if this situation couldn't get any more out of control, the internet did not appreciate United CEO Oscar Munoz's response to the matter because he used the word "re-accommodate." The incident was anything but accommodating.

This comes only weeks after the internet dragged United through the mud after kicking two girls off a flight for wearing leggings, turning United Airlines into the most hated airline on the internet right now. Which really is saying a lot, because people absolutely love to hate airlines.

Video credit: Tyler Bridges via Storyful