A South Carolina student has been arrested and expelled from a private Catholic school after disturbing videos circulated online of him threatening black people, according to reports.

In the footage, the student — who identifies himself as Parker Mustian — boasts that he’s a “hater of all black men” then shoots a shoebox that he said represented black people.

“I hate black people,” he said in the first clip. “They’re the worst. They’re stinky and they just suck. They’re just bad people.”

He then shoots a box of Air Jordans, which he refers to as the “favorite pair of shoes for a black man.”

“I’m going to show you what I think of a black man,” Mustian said. “F–k all n—-rs.”

In a second video, the teen continues to fire weapons at the same shoebox.

“It seems that our n—-r hasn’t quite learned his lesson yet,” Mustian said. “It seems like he needs twenty-five rounds to the dome.”

The disturbing footage was filmed in May but started circulating last month at Cardinal Newman School in Columbia. The videos were turned over by school officials on July 15 to the Richland County Sheriff’s Department, The State reported.

Mustian is the grandson of Richard Quinn, a political strategist who was arrested earlier this year in a corruption probe, FITS News reported. Quinn faces charges of perjury and obstruction of justice.

A source close to Mustian claimed that he filmed the video for the “shock value,” the news outlet reported.

“The idea was to see who could be the most outlandishly, ridiculously offensive,” the source told FITS News. “They weren’t being serious.”

Deputies investigating the footage later discovered more footage and texts — including the student’s threat to “shoot up the school,” The State reported.

The teen has since been charged with making student threats — but authorities haven’t released his name due to his age.

School officials also didn’t identify Mustian as the student Friday night when they notified parents about the arrest.

“The next few days may be challenging for Cardinal Newman School, so I ask your prayers for our students, teachers, staff and administration,” Principal Robert Loia wrote, according to the news outlet.