Prior to the video going viral, the student hadn't been suspended. That's also become typical across the country. The genesis of all this is the "School-to-Prison Pipeline" hypothesis proferred by some of Chris's moronic colleagues in higher education. It's the largest harebrained conspiracy theory out there at the moment. Since every teacher and every administrator at every school with any significant black population has heard of this theory many times and have been admonished to not discipline so many black students, it is indeed a conspiracy on the part of teachers and administrators to target black students and then put them in the criminal justice system, so that they can eventually be imprisoned. In concert with police, prosecutors and judges. Everyone who believes that, stand on your heads.
You won't be shocked to learn that violence against teachers has been spiking, while, amazingly, suspensions and expulsions have been declining. Even teachers' unions, reliably down with the cause in the past, are starting to get red pilled because their members are facing more and more serious violence from students like this one. In case you're interested, instead of removing this violent, androgynous student who appears to have a few extra Y chromosomes floating around, so she cannot harm any other teachers or students, the preferred path is now called "restorative justice." This also emanates from some the advanced brains of Chris's dopey colleagues whose life experiences outside of the academic bubble generally rise to a number no greater than one that can be counted on one of your hands. Restorative justice was create in the 1970s and the idea was essentially like restitution. The offender was to make things whole, or as whole as possible, for his victims. That original conception of restorative justice has now been stood on its head and bastardized into essentially a contemporary encounter group, where the offender/criminal gets to vent at his/her victim. Because as we all know, sharing our feelings is what resolves these situations, as well as making crime victims aware of how they are complicit in the "systems" that oppress the criminal offenders in our schools and beyond the school walls, as well.
Link: https://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2018/11/08/student-hits-teacher-baltimore-high-school/