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Saturday, September 18, 2021

Texas NAACP, students file federal civil rights complaint over UT-Austin’s ‘Eyes of Texas’

I have covered this issue of the Eyes of Texas song on this blog. I may have missed some earlier news because it really caught me by surprise to read herein that the University of Texas at Austin decided to create a a separate marching band for students who do not want to play “The Eyes of Texas” song. This unmistakably smacks of Plessy v. Ferguson all over again. 

Since we know that Plessy's separate but equal doctrine was unethical, unjust, and humiliating policy, how could anyone fathom this proposed remedy as a solution? In fact, it deepens the wound.

If it helps, I shared Dr. Alberto Martinez's in-depth analysis of "100 Problems in the Eyes of Texas" with my students this semester and they were shocked to learn about the history of this song. No one in my class of 23 students this semester said they felt strongly about the song after learning about it. They even said that they were deeply offended by it.  One student even said that he approached his reading of the analysis in full support of the song, but was convinced after reading Dr. Martinez' analysis that it has to go. 

I have had conversations in my class with students for years, but never had any data or evidence to substantiate the sentiments that students felt and shared about the song. It also felt taboo to even raise as a concern in polite company. Notwithstanding its iconic status, now the veil is off. 

Here are the pieces I've posted to this blog on the matter:

Austin students, alumni groups denounce use of ‘Eyes of Texas’ and demand its retirement

True Origins of ‘The Eyes of Texas’


For the record, it not only offends many African Americans and the NAACP. If you go through the "100 Problems," you'll see that it similarly offends a broad swath of folks, including many women who find the song's words "creepy," such that appeals to its removal should be taken seriously.

-Angela Valenzuela


Texas NAACP, students file federal civil rights complaint over UT-Austin’s ‘Eyes of Texas’

The complaint signals a continued desire among some UT-Austin students and alumni to push administrators to discontinue using the song as the university’s alma mater, despite the university’s insistence that it will remain.

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