A student who led a seven-day hunger strike at University of Missouri last year that caused the school's president and chancellor to resign had a history of stealing and misogyny, it has been revealed.

Johnathan Butler, who has since gone on to do a speaking tour, stole breakfast food from hotels, according to Fox News, posted videos calling women 'ratchet' and sang about crack cocaine.

Butler created a blog where he detailed 'trying to get caught stealing "free" breakfast items' from a hotel that he would go to before work.

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Johnathon Butler (pictured), a graduate student at University of Missouri, went on a seven-day hunger strike last year to oust the Mizzou president and chancellor

Since his successful hunger strike, Butler has gone on to do a speaking tour but questionable videos of the student have surfaced

He writes that for 61 days he 'indulged in the "free" food' and tried to get caught.

Butler made sure staff would see his face and made goofy faces at the hotel's security camera.

Fox News reported Butler's mission to get caught taking the 'complimentary' snacks, but Butler's blog posts on The Massive Impact have since been hidden or deleted.

A 2009 blog post shows a now-deleted YouTube video titled 'The Crack Cocaine Song' with a caption reading: 'This is a song about crack that me, my friend, and my roommate put together back in 2009. Good memories never die.'

In the nine-minute clip, portions of which have been uploaded by Heat Street, Butler can be seen in a room with his friend shouting and singing about crack cocaine.

In one video, Butler discusses with a friend the difference between men and women. He goes on to call women 'ratchet' and says men don't have the problems women do

In another video from 2009 he sings and laughs about crack cocaine and people selling the drug to pay child support

He strings together a narrative about a man 'selling crack' so he can pay for his 'girl's' baby and child support.

In a different 15-minute video from 2011, since deleted from YouTube but also uploaded by Heat Street, Butler debates 'a very important issue—of XX versus XY', he says.

'Yes, ladies and gentlemen, male and female: which is better,' he adds in the video.

Butler and a friend discuss 'ratchet', meaning to them promiscuous, women in the video. After his friend explains his definition of a 'good girl versus a ratchet girl' Butler says: 'So you’re saying, she jumps from male to male.

In a blog post that has since been deleted, Butler discusses stealing 'free' breakfast from a hotel and trying to get caught

'So this would be like in the kingdom, the wild kingdom, where they’re trying to get their prey.

'We have to call it what it is, ladies and gentlemen. Just ratchet.

'So what he’s saying is that us as men, we don’t have issues, it’s all women, obviously, because what do we do? We just eat, sleep, work, we’re the backbone.

Butler is the son of a wealthy railroad executive, Eric L. Butler (pictured), who earned $8.4 million in 2014

'Is that what you’re saying?... You’re saying all women are trash, is that what you’re saying?'

His friend says that's not what he's saying. He says it's a 'two way street' and that there are 'good girls' and 'ratchet women'.

'The only reason the "ratchet species" existed is because they choose to put themselves in that situation,' Butler says.

His friend goes on to explain women will do 'whatever they can' to get what they want and will 'lie, cheat, steal to get what they want'.

'What you do, it follows you. Like your transcript, what you do follows you for the rest of your life,' Butler says.

Butler is also the son of a wealthy railroad executive, Eric L. Butler.

Eric L. Butler is the executive vice president for sales and marketing for the Union Pacific Railroad and was compensation $8.4 million in 2014, according to regulatory filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.