That thought had occurred to me earlier, so I check my BIOS time on
every reboot, which is every ~10min. when tracking down this time
issue.  BIOS clock is correct local time evey reboot, but this timeshift
still occurs.

In addition, perhaps I didn't make my self clear, the time zone is off
in the other (more westerly direction).  Instead of Greenwich my system
thinks its ~Fiji; "date"="hwclock"-9 hours.

In a sense you're correct:  If I set my BIOS clock to GMT then I won't
have such complaints.  But I occasionally do dual boot into that other
operating system from Redmond.  And that clock would get messed up if I
set my BIOS clock to GMT.  

I think somehow on this system Linux insists on *thinking* that hwclock
is in GMT on return from suspend/standby even though it is *told* that
hwclock is local time.

My /etc/sysconfig/clock:
UTC=false
ARC=false
ZONE=US/Pacific

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