Before I continue, just fyi, if all you do is vent here, be prepared for a lack of sympathy as well as some "boohoo" comments. This board has a lot of highly driven, successful, but also sometimes judgmental people on it. Also the all caps thing really comes across as whiny, just saying.
BUT, if you are seeking advice, here is some.
I was there once. I had to drop out of college after basically failing all of my courses freshman year. My situation was different in that I was on campus. Years later I knew what I wanted to do, and how to do it, and finally got my four year degree.
Most colleges will let you appeal why they should let you continue with them despite your poor grades.
Was it due to a learning disability? (Certain neurological disorders/mental illnesses can affect motivation, as well as affect time management, and other skills. Time management is huge, can't think of a job where it isn't important. I have lost jobs due to poor time management, not fun. If motivation is the issue, again, look into professional help, no shame in that.
Your school should have a disability resource management center where they can give you testing accommodations (more notes, more time, private test taking room).
Online school is hard, mainly because if you get instructors that are hard to get a hold of, you can feel like you are drowning.
I agree with other posters saying as soon as you struggled, you should have contacted your professors for help. Most are required by policy to respond within a day or two. If they don't, you need to use the online campus resources, or ask a fellow classmate.
This is a learning experience, don't blame the pandemic, take responsibility for your actions.
You can improve time management. For some, it's easy (showing up early or on time, knowing roughly how long things will take), but for others, it's a skill that needs to be practiced.
Good luck my dude, you'll figure it out.