Seven Days in January

Black students target teachers for violence.



The first week in January 2015was a busy time for racial violence directed at teachers.

Let’s start in Monroe, Louisiana. Facebook videographer “Tanglewood Hard Hitta,” transports us into the middle of a few dozen black teenage girls fighting and screaming.

Teacher’s aide David Payne was trying to break it up when Ryan Marquez Gix took a running start at Payne, all the while slipping into a set of brass knuckles. Then from behind, he bashed Payne in the face.

Unlike us watching the video, Payne never saw it coming. He woke up in the hospital, lucky to be alive, with his skull fractured in three places and bleeding on the brain.298





Over in Yonkers, a 9th grade black student attacked a white teacher, on video. The substitute teacher did not get a skull fracture, but he is pressing charges.299

Let’s go to the Buffalo News for the next story: 300

A Buffalo teacher is recovering from a concussion after being assaulted by a student Tuesday at Highgate Heights Elementary School. The student has been suspended.

The teacher was in a hallway heading back to her classroom when she encountered the student, Buffalo Teachers Federation President Philip Rumore said. When the teacher asked the student what she was doing in the hall, the student forced the teacher to the floor, kicked her in the face and chest and beat her with a book.

Rumore said he wanted to make sure the girl received anger management training before she is re-admitted to the school.

Highgate Heights is 92 percent black and parents and teachers say violence has been an everyday fact of life there for a very long time. Including the Kevin Coady episode from earlier in the book.

You remember: The one where Rumore, the head of the teachers’ union, pretended he was surprised at the violence against his members.

Moving on: The web site Little Rock Matters describes the next attack: “A 66-year-old woman who works as an assistant principal at a local middle school has been injured in a hallway beating by a student, according to police.”

“The assistant principal was attacked after calling the suspect out into the hallway and trying to keep the two girls apart.”

“The student punched the assistant principal in the facial region for about 20 seconds. The injured woman was taken to the hospital after telling police she had head and neck pain and difficulty walking.”

And oh yeah, this has been happening for a long time at Pulaski Heights Middle School, says one parent to GreatSchools.org:

The children are out of control. If your student has a substitute, forget about any learning. Students make noises and get out of their seats during normal class time. Bullying is not addressed. The vice principal does nothing to address any bullying issue.

His standard response is to "agree to disagree". School district policy on bullying is not followed at all. Fights and threats are common occurrences.

Marlin Newburn is unimpressed with all the excuses for black violence in schools from Singleton and his acolytes.

After 30 years as a court-ordered and prison psychologist, Newburn has seen up close what happens when schools excuse bad behavior for any reason, including race.

Especially race.

The liberal is the prototypical appeaser of bad behavior, and for decades, liberals have run public schools in America,” Newburn said. “I've seen firsthand where the most brutal school space-taker (not, "student") will be given scores of chances instead of permanently sending it home for parental repair. After all, the public school potentates believe school thugs are just misunderstood and should be given unending chances to destroy the learning environment. That the teachers are paying the personal price for this thug-enabling system comes not as a shock. It is predictable.

I lied: Theres too much of it. I cannot fit it all in just one chapter. Or even two. Or even one book.

So I’ll put the rest of this chapter with all the links at my web site. Just go to WhiteGirlBleedaLot.com and find the link to the Missing Chapter.