Brits are Oh Miraging after residents of Clifton, Bristol, fitted anti-bird spikes on trees in order to protect their cars from droppings.
SEE ALSO: Mum and sons fight anti-homeless spikes with cushions and chocolateThe spikes — which are sometimes fitted to buildings to prevent birds from nesting — have been nailed to two trees in the front garden of private properties in an affluent area of the city in south west England.
Shocked Brits have flocked to Twitter to express their rage at the move.
"The human race may have reached new lows with this... If the earth decided to swallow us all, it would probably be quite fair actually (and a bit overdue!)," tweeted one person.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Some expressed their horror at the image, which they felt said spoke volumes about our society.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Many wondered what it was that made the residents' cars so worthy of protection.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Some felt that the move was akin to something a movie villain would do.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
And, others suggested exacting revenge on the people who fitted the spikes to the trees.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
SMDH.
Jason Momoa, Claire Foy, and Matt Damon to host 'SNL'10 ridiculous things that could totally happen in 'Fantastic Beasts 3'Netflix turns to children's lit, adapting popular Roald Dahl storiesInSight beams home its first photo from the surface of Mars"Hey Siri, OK Google" on iOS will now open the Google Assistant'Sucker Punch,' Zack Snyder's hated 2011 movie, is actually goodSamsung's Galaxy S10 is shaping up to be extremely featureApple must pay up to $14.5 billion in Irish taxesA record number of girls are unhappy with their appearance and life overall7 of the most dangerous gender reveal party fails'The Lion King' trailer dredges up painful memories of one particular sceneThe best gifts for all you holidayApple must pay up to $14.5 billion in Irish taxesChinese facial recognition system catches jaywalker, turns out to be a busFacebook death threats allegedly at centre of race tensions in Kalgoorlie'Sucker Punch,' Zack Snyder's hated 2011 movie, is actually goodComedian's ultra'Sucker Punch,' Zack Snyder's hated 2011 movie, is actually goodInstagram is going to shuffle around your profile pageThe best gifts for all you holiday A UK politician just became editor of a newspaper and Twitter is flipping out Climate change has greatly impacted the world in 2019 Incredible sights from space as astronauts celebrate Christmas and Hanukkah Disney+ is coming to Tesla cars soon, says Elon Musk Influencers get pushback for support of Saudi Arabia PR campaign George Orwell's '1984' became too real this decade Women found Trump's body language towards Angela Merkel so painfully familiar 'The Rise of Skywalker' failed to care about Finn's story. That's a problem. Why the holidays warp our perception of time Everything to remember from 'YOU' Season 1 Incredible photos capture 'Ring of Fire' in the final solar eclipse of 2019 We've had our fun, now let's leave BBC Dad and his family alone McDonald's Twitter account just dropped some fire on Donald Trump (and then deleted it) Hire care enjoys the wet sand between its tires after being swept up by tide Trump kicked One Direction out of his hotel because he's not a nice man How do you pronounce the weirdest emoticon on the internet? The debate continues to rage Tesla rolls out a holiday software update Sorry cord cutters, Sling TV just raised its prices Think the iPhone's camera bump is big? Samsung's Galaxy S11+ could beat it. 'You' Season 2 is still the depraved thriller you fell in love with