Yet another Brooklyn College professor is under fire for a controversial online post.

Veteran computer science Professor Dr. Rohit Parikh wrote on Facebook that all illegal immigrants should be deported — and questioned the desirability of Hispanic immigrants in particular, according to students protesting the post.

Parikh, who is Indian-American, authored the post in response to a New York Times article in July, but it only came to the attention of outraged students last week, the students said.

In the now-deleted post, the Harvard-educated academic said Latinos drop out of school at a high rate and that America needs an increasingly educated populace in order to compete, the group said.

“Hispanics are GOOD people, gentle and nice and not at all criminal,” the posting reads. “But are they really the population which America needs for the rest of this century when more and more education is required?”

Parikh also drew a distinction between high-achieving Indian immigrants and Latinos before noting that illegals deserved to get chucked out of the country, the students said.

“And yes, I do believe that everyone who is illegally here should be deported but that the US should support them in their home country,” the posting said. “Immigration, yes. Chaotic and illegal immigration, NO, NO, NO and NO!”

A slew of campus student groups ripped the post and said they will stage a protest of Parikh’s alleged commentary on campus Tuesday.

“This is horrifying,” student Carlos Jesus Calzadilla told The Post. “This is the type of language that leads directly to violence against minorities.”

Calzadilla said Brooklyn College has many undocumented students and that the post poses a direct threat to their safety.

“He is openly advocating for Latinx students to be deported,” Calzadilla said, using the gender-neutral term “Latinx” to refer to both Latinos and Latinas.

Several student groups have issued a list of demands for administrators, including a full investigation of what they said were Parikh’s comments, a public condemnation, mandatory sensitivity training for staff and boosted funding for Latino studies.

The school declined to comment Tuesday on the post or the protest.

Parikh did not respond to a request for comment.

The politically charged firestorm is just the latest to engulf Brooklyn College, where another professor, Mitchell Langbert, was the subject of a student protest earlier this month.

Writing on his personal blog, Langbert ripped the accusations against then-US Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh during his confirmation hearings and suggested that his alleged high school sexual misconduct was to be expected.

Langbert said the commentary was satirical and qualified as protected speech.

While administrators blasted the nature of this commentary, the school eventually backed Langbert’s right to express it.