Actually, yes. It wasn't always this way. Social media, protests, boycotts, title ix, etc have created an environment of fear and intimidation in situations like this. An institution like UT will bend the knee out of fear and throw this most basic individual right out the window. People used to expect and demand that people were considered innocent until they had their day in court. They also used to believe in the right to a speedy trial by a group of ones peers, but as we've seen in other cases involving UT players, the justice system has even lost sight of that right. It grinds the rights of the accused and does so at a snails pace. All the while, the lives of people yet to be found guilty are basically shut down and put on hold. The world today is not enlightened. It's taken a perverse view and what used to be up is down. What was right is now wrong.
At least with Thompson, he only lost a couple of games and not several YEARS waiting for a day in court or a resolution. Still, it was not the just thing to do. He might be a bad apple. He likely has temper issues, but he still deserved the presumption of innocence. His life should not have been put on hold, period.