San Francisco shoegaze/rock band Whirr are currently under fire for recent transphobic comments made on Twitter, mostly regarding punk band G.L.O.S.S. who released a relentless ripper of a demo EP at the beginning of 2015.

Since Whirr's tweets made the rounds, Run For Cover Records, a label Whirr has worked with on at least a few releases, announced that they would no longer be working with the band due to their behavior. You can see some of Whirr's tweets and Run For Cover's response below.

Read more: Attila singer and Senses Fail clash over homophobic slur

They also touched on suicide…

@elohellie lol attempting suicide. If you're gonna do it, do it right the first time. — Whirr (@free_whirl) October 20, 2015 @elohellie @ShieldExhile nah, that's an actual stance on suicide. My mom commited suicide why can't all these trans kids get it right? — Whirr (@free_whirl) October 20, 2015

Whether or not it was all the tweets bringing the situation to their attention, RFC acted:

We as individuals and as a label are accepting of all people and require the same from the bands and people we work with… — Run For Cover (@rfcrecords) October 20, 2015 We will not be working with Whirr from this point on and do not support that behavior in anyway. We will post a full statement tomorrow. — Run For Cover (@rfcrecords) October 20, 2015 G.L.O.S.S. is awesome and crucially important and we need more bands like them. — Run For Cover (@rfcrecords) October 20, 2015

Naturally, Whirr got a ton of hate tweets; some harsher than others. They retweeted probably all of them… Here is just a fraction to give you an idea.

G.L.O.S.S.'s vocalist fired back at Whirr with some acerbic tweets of her own: