A number of celebrities took to social media after supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.

Angry MAGA supporters protested Trump's election loss to President-elect Joe Biden . It lead to the death of four people as politicians scrambling to safety.

Authorities lost control as rioters entered the Capitol building, with some of the MAGA mob making it in to speaker Nancy Pelosi's office.

Leading the messages against the rioters was rapper Cardi B. She highlighted the irony between the violent protests and the was peaceful Black Lives Matters protests that were handled over the summer.

She tweeted: "The irony is pretty funny.........weren't people just wild animals in the summer for demanding justice and now? [thinking face emojis]......Let me just watch."

Filmmaker Ava DuVernay shared a clip from the day's events, writing: "The language of white supremacy is a language of cowardice disguised as dominance."

Actor Armie Hammer wrote: "Reported shots fired inside the house chambers. This is why we can't have nice things, you f***ing mouth breathers who stormed the capital ... It's a good thing this wasn't a BLM rally or else these a******s would have actual riot police to deal with."

Captain America actor Chris Evans, wrote on Twitter: "I'm speechless. Just think of the carnage had they not been white. So many people enabled this."

Other celebs called for the impeachment and removal of Trump, after his Twitter account was suspended amid a series of unfounded tweets.

Actress Sarah Jessica Parker tweeted: "Unimaginable. Disgraceful. Shocking. But no surprise. So many to hold responsible. You know who you are. You dismissed the violent, divisive, cruel rhetoric. You made excuses. Cowards He/you are not leaders. We will try to re-build. You will try to live with yourselves."

Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel called out President Donald Trump.

He called Trump’s enablers as “scumbags” for helping him "spread lies " about the election.

“That’s you, Josh Hawley. That’s you, Ted Cruz,” Kimmel said referring to the Republican senators from Missouri and Texas, who objected to the election results.

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James Corden addressed the chaos with his opening monologue during the opening of his Late Late Show on Wednesday.

Branding Trump "a lunatic" he said: "It's a crazy, sad day, a day that will go down as a dark one in the long history of America..."

"It felt sad, it felt wrong, but mainly, it felt hopeless... I hope when the dust settles and we reflect on what happened on this awful day, that we still have hope. Because in two weeks on those same steps, where that mob fought and pushed past police, Joe Biden will be sworn in as president of the United States."

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Legendary singer Stevie Wonder, who called for "narcissistic and dangerous" Trump to be removed from office following the horrific riots in Washington DC.

The Superstition singer tweeted: "It is time for the leaders of this country to invoke the 25th Amendment. Isn't it obvious? Today has made me sad with disbelief with what is happening in my country, a country that has inspired my songs of hope and love."

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