After the video gained thousands of views, FedEx released a statement condemning his actions and confirming that he no longer works for the company.

Vincent Paterno has disputed media reports that he was fired for the video, instead alleging he quit the job before it blew up online.

The video was posted on September 17 and captured Paterno in his FedEx uniform, proudly boasting that he would not deliver to houses that supported Biden, Harris or BLM. “I just wanted to come on here and let all you know that if you don’t have a flag in front of your house, and if you have a Joe Biden, Kamala fing camel toe posted up in front of your house, Black Lives Matter, I will not deliver your s,” he said.

“I will not deliver your s***,” he repeated. “I will bring that back to the station and I will keep doing that s***.”

The video has gained over 85,000 views and 4,000 likes in the time since being posted.

In a statement to Newsweek, FedEx confirmed that Paterno no longer works there, reading: “We are appalled by the behavior depicted in this video, which does not reflect the views of FedEx. This individual is no longer providing service on behalf of the company.”

When asked by Newsweek if the video led to his firing, as suggested by media reports, FedEx added the following statement: “We condemn the comments made and do not discuss details regarding the personnel of service providers.”

Paterno however has alleged on his same TikTok account that he was not fired due to the video, but instead left the job before the video even went viral.

“Funny, well I have a couple text messages that I sent out to my boss in August stating that September 3rd was going to be my last day,” he said in a video shared yesterday.

He then shared various alleged text messages from August 9th telling his boss, “hate to tell you this but Sept 3 will be my last day here.”

A series of screenshots of other alleged text messages display him messaging his co-workers about his last day on September 16.

Paterno may no longer be employed by FedEx, but the video has caused outrage online over his behavior during the employment.

“Some people get medicine delivered, including life saving medication or medical devices. You could be hurting people,” pointed out one TikTok user.

“You don’t have the right to not do your job because you disagree with someone else’s beliefs,” wrote another user.

Newsweek has contacted Vincent Paterno for comment.