A white Rutgers University professor is facing intense backlash for calling out gentrification in a Facebook rant attacking white kids invading his beloved Harlem, The New York Post reports. 

History professor James Livingston was grabbing a burger at Harlem Shake restaurant, Thursday, May 31, when he noticed the number of white people in his neighborhood.

“OK, officially, I now hate white people. I am a white people [sic], for God’s sake, but can we keep them — us — us out of my neighborhood?” Livingston wrote in a now-deleted post.

The restaurant he frequents was “overrun with little Caucasian a**holes who know their parents will approve of anything they do,” according to him. 

On the surface, one may point out that Livingston is part of the problem, but he doesn't factor himself into the mass invasion of white people taking over the historically black and brown area of New York. He scolds the unwanted newcomers for being loud and disorderly. 

“Slide around the floor, you little s**thead, sing loudly, you unlikely moron. Do what you want, nobody here is gonna restrict your right to be white … I hereby resign from my race. F**k these people. Yeah, I know, it’s about access to my dinner. F**k you, too.”

Presumably, other angry white people flagged his post, and it was quickly removed from the platform. The rant heard around the internet was considered hate speech according to Facebook's new community guidelines. 

"I just don't want little Caucasians overrunning my life, as they did last night," he explained. "Please God, remand [sic] them to the suburbs, where they and their parents can colonize every restaurant, all the while pretending that the idiotic indulgence of their privilege signifies cosmopolitan–you know, as in sophisticated "European"–commitments."

Livingston, who originally helms from Lombard, Illinois, said his post ruffled a few feathers. He received over two dozen hate-filled emails and messages calling him a racist. Some included threats of violence. 

Rutgers University has yet to respond to the matter, and it isn't clear if the university plans to do so.