
Post Positions for the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve
Andy Frost
276 posts

@TheFroman70
Orthodontist, Golfer, Music Lover, Poker Player, Patriot

Post Positions for the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve

I understand the sentiment here, but I’ll take the other side. Clubs work hard to cultivate a specific atmosphere. It’s why people line up to pay a premium to join. Allowing employees (or contractors) to engage in member activities dilutes the experience. Also- why is that specific caddie entitled to lunch but the others aren’t? Best to draw the lines in ink. The club is in the right here.


Name a better external (non-golf) architectural feature on a golf course than the lighthouse at Harbour Town

California is trying to pass a bill that would criminalize investigative journalism with misdemeanors, $10,000 fines, imprisonment, and content takedown. The proposed bill is titled AB 2624 and was made after I exposed mass fraud by immigrant groups in America. Under AB 2624, government-funded entities like the Somali “Learing” Daycare centers would be protected from being exposed if they operated inside California. The enemy truly is within. When our politicians would rather protect fraudsters and illegal migrants, it’s time for us to stand up or face mass oppression from the traitors who “rule” over us.


What’s the best one-liner in movie history?



🙏⭐️🙏 Your child can name Steve Jobs in seconds. Ask them about Roy Clay Sr.. That pause? That silence? That's the gap we're responsible for closing. Roy Clay Sr. was born in #kinloch, Missouri - the oldest incorporated African American community in the state. No indoor plumbing. Segregated schools. Jim Crow rules enforced not just by law, but by humiliation. As a boy, he learned what racism cost before he fully understood the word. One summer day in Ferguson, after yard work, he bought a soda and sat outside because he wasn't allowed to drink it inside the store. Police handcuffed him, drove him toward Baileys Pond, and left him with a warning never to return. He walked home alone. When he told his mother what happened, she didn't offer bitterness. She offered direction: "You will face racism the rest of your life, but don't ever let that be a reason why you don't succeed." He carried that sentence like armor. Message Q Roy graduated from Saint Louis University in 1951 with a degree in mathematics — becoming the first African American to do so. There was no "computer science" degree yet. The field hadn't even been named. His first interview at McDonnell Aircraft ended with a blunt dismissal: "We have no jobs for professional Negroes." So he taught himself to code. He went back. And this time, they hired him. By 1958, Roy was at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, developing radiation tracking systems for potential nuclear fallout. While future tech icons were still children, Roy Clay was writing software at the highest levels of national science. In 1965, David Packard recruited him to Hewlett-Packard. At the time, HP didn't sell computers. Roy Clay changed that. He became the first Director of HP's Research and Development Software and Hardware Group and led the team that built the HP 2116A — the company's first computer — bringing it to market in 1966. It helped shift computing away from room-sized mainframes toward something more accessible. He wasn't just in the room. He was building the room. In the 1970s, venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins chose Roy as their computer consultant. He evaluated companies like Intel Corporation before they became giants. The architecture of Silicon Valley carries his fingerprints. And he didn't forget where he came from. As one of the highest-ranking Black executives at HP, he actively recruited from historically Black colleges and universities, including #Morehouse College. Representation wasn't symbolic to him. It was structural correction. After leaving HP, he founded ROD-L Electronics, developing safety testing equipment essential to the personal computer revolution. The surge protectors and safety standards that protect home electronics? His work helped make that world trustworthy. Then he stepped into civic leadership. In 1973, #RoyClay became the first African American elected to the Palo Alto City Council — later serving as Vice Mayor. A Black boy once barred from sitting inside a store was now governing the heart of Silicon Valley. In 2021, St. Louis opened the Roy Clay Sr. Computer Lab in his honor. The state that once tried to limit him now names technology spaces after him. He passed away in 2024 at 95 years old. But here's the truth: Roy Clay Sr. didn't just break barriers. He built infrastructure. He built the first #computer HP sold. He advised the investors who funded the digital age. He created companies that made electronics safer. He pulled Black engineers into spaces that had been designed without them. And somehow, many textbooks still whisper his name — if they mention it at all. So tell this story. Tell the young person sitting in algebra wondering if tech was built for them. Tell them a Black boy from segregated Missouri helped build Silicon Valley itself. History is not only what is printed. It's what we choose to pass on. Roy Clay Sr. didn't wait for recognition. He built something so foundational that recognition would eventually have no choice 🙏🇺🇸🙏

