Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul took aim at the "one-sided" contract that airlines give its customers, responding to this week's United Airlines controversy in which a man was forcibly removed and bloodied after refusing to give up his seat on an overbooked plane.

"But it is [in] their 30,000 word contract so it must be ok," Paul said in the first of a pair of tweets Wednesday, mocking the airline. Paul was referencing an opinion piece from City Journal titled, "May I drag you from your seat?: Corporate cluelessness is leading to a decline in institutional confidence."

But it is I n their 30,000 word contract so it must be ok. https://t.co/AZwL5LD0FJ@ — Senator Rand Paul (@RandPaul) April 12, 2017



"We retain the right to take back the ticket you paid for, handcuff you, beat you about the head & bloody you," Paul continued his mock impression of a United Airlines contract in a follow-up tweet. He added: "This contract seems one sided."

We retain the right to take back the ticket you paid for, handcuff you, beat you about the head & bloody you. This contract seems one sided — Senator Rand Paul (@RandPaul) April 12, 2017



The controversy started when video appeared online showing David Dao, a 69-year-old Vietnamese-American doctor, struggled with security guards and later, seemingly unconscious, being dragged off the overbooked United Airlines plane. The widespread backlash has prompted United CEO Oscar Munoz to apologize for the "horrific event" and said the company takes full responsibility and "will work to make it right."