How Not to Do Social Media Part 300, Courtesy of Alec Baldwin

The actor took to Twitter to express his outrage when a rally for raising the national minimum wage blocked traffic through New York City on Wednesday.

Alec Baldwin has added his name to a growing list of public figures who've made some major social media faux pas in recent months.

Baldwin, who is an actor best known for the hit NBC series 30 Rock, among other leading film and television roles, had a bone to pick with protestors in New York City last week. The protestors were rallying for a higher minimum wage ($15.00, to be exact) also known as the Fight for $15 campaign. Workers in more than 200 cities nationwide participated in the event. The campaign started back in November of 2012 with McDonald's employees demanding a minimum wage hike. This April the fast-food juggernaut announced that it would increase that number by $1 dollar.

Baldwin, for his part, complained that the rally in Midtown Manhattan blocked traffic through the city.

"Protestors have blocked off a huge quadrant of midtown traffic in support of a higher minimum wage. I support their goal, not their method," Baldwin tweeted through his affiliated ABFoundation account.

His comments earned the ire of at least one

Baldwin tweeted a tepid response to Swarns on Sunday morning: "I support the cause, but not the method. But liberals are above criticism. Well, some."

The transgression did not go unnoticed in the Twitterverse where the backlash to Baldwin was swift. But the actor was just as rapidfire in his responses, which included statements such as: "Another day, another chance to block liberal pedants," or "You are a class-ist nitwit."

Here are Baldwin's original tweets:

Of course, Baldwin is no stranger to Twitter controversy. Who can forget his kerfuffle with American Airlines a few years ago? Thus, continues the actor's streak of losing friends and alienating people on social media.

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