"Yeah, well, you know, that's just like, uh, your opinion, man."

Accountability and Transparency

01:53 Tuesday, 11 March 2014
Words: 264

We believe people, and corporations, are responsible for the things they do. When they break the law, hurt people or the environment, we believe in holding them accountable.

In order to hold people and corporations accountable, we have to be able to observe what they're doing.

Apple was held accountable for Foxconn's working conditions because people were able to observe what was going on and report on it. Conditions changed. They improved. Whether they've improved enough is perhaps debatable. But the fact is that without observation, without some level of transparency, there can be no accountability.

Edward Snowden provided transparency into what was going on within the NSA, at some cost to his liberty. The NSA is now being held accountable, at least to some degree. Whether it's enough is perhaps debatable.

What is Google doing in its data centers?

Who is Google's Edward Snowden?

Why does Google deserve more "privacy" than you do?

There is no accountability without transparency.

What is Google doing in its data centers?

Can Google subvert democracy with the information it is amassing on everyone?

Can Google influence what bills make it out of committee?

How is Google different than the most massive opposition research organization ever conceived?

Can Google influence which candidates choose to run?

Can Google influence which representatives choose to retire?

Can Google influence how legislators vote on legislation?

What is Google doing in its data centers?

What does Google know about your representatives?

What does Google know about government regulators?

What does Google know about federal prosecutors?

What is Google doing in its data centers?

The blue hour...

21:37 Sunday, 11 March 2018
Words: 565

Since sunrise is an hour "later" this morning, I considered walking to the beach to get some sunrise shots. But once I got outside, I noticed there were no clouds. Now, there may have been some clouds low on the horizon at the beach, I'll never know. They can add a little interest, but probably not enough to walk to the beach. Since I already had the camera ready, I took a few of the pond.

Photograph of blue hour reflection

If you click on the image, you'll get a larger 3MP version, where the sky noise (also reflected in the pond) is readily visible. Part of this was laziness on my part. I bumped the ISO up because I was kind of hurrying. The E-M10 Mk2 has 5-axis image stabilization, and I probably could have shot this at ISO 200 if I cared to take my time.

I probably shouldn't point it out, because unless you're a photographer, or a hobbyist, you'd probably never notice it. And once someone points it out to you, you'll never not notice it.

But it's a technical point, and it doesn't overly detract from the image, unless the technical points are what you look for in an image.

When I first started shooting, someone pointed out to me that my horizons were always tilted. So I'd use iPhoto to straighten them. Jonathon Delacour, himself a skilled photographer, said I should never do that. He felt that the tilted horizon was part of how I framed the image in the viewfinder. So, for a while, I just posted tilted horizons. But I always noticed them, because someone once pointed them out to me.

Well, many cameras today come with the same gyroscopes and accelerometers that are in your phone. They can display the tilt of the camera, both horizontally and vertically. The vertical (pitch) tilt is important in order to avoid "converging verticals." Again, this was something I never noticed, or, at least, didn't think it was "wrong," until I read about it. In an image like this one, where you're trying to capture the reflections in the water as you see them, you need to have the camera sensor parallel to the image plane, otherwise the reflections will be distorted. Again, if you don't know to look for it, you probably would never notice it. But once you do...

So now I have the orientation indicators on more often than I have the histogram. I can kind of gauge exposure through the viewfinder or LCD, but my eye isn't good enough to know when the camera is "straight" without help. I can tell after the shot, on the computer, but not composing it through the viewfinder. So the indicators help.

I shot a lot of architecture on our wedding road trip. All the shots are distorted geometrically. Drives me nuts now. Some of them aren't fixable, really. And if you really want to get things straight from the disadvantaged ground level point of view most of us are stuck with, you have to use a tilt-shift lens and a tripod.

Anyway, I guess the point is, the more you know, the more frustrated you can be.

Tilt

22:07 Sunday, 11 March 2018
Words: 257

This is a small example of the problem of geometric distortion. We spent a day or so in Asheville, NC last October. Lovely city. Hipster vibe is a little too on the nose for my taste, "Austin of the east!" or something. But lovely city.

Anyway, there's a great story about civic construction in the early part of the 20th century, funded by bonds, which was immediately followed by the Great Depression. The city paid off all the bonds, eventually, but there was little interest in a lot of the new developments that took place in the 60s. I may not be exactly correct on that story, but that's what I recall. The upside is that Asheville has perhaps one of the best collections of Art Deco architecture in the country, and I love Art Deco.

I believe this is city all. First shot is straight out of the camera, the other is cropped and rotated a bit - I may have used PT Lens to try and fix it, but I can't recall - other than being very frustrated with PT Lens.

SOOC:

Photograph of Asheville, NC City Hall

Edited:

Photograph of Asheville, NC City Hall

So Many Rabbit Holes

06:31 Saturday, 11 March 2023
Current Wx: Temp: 54.81°F Pressure: 1008hPa Humidity: 87% Wind: 8.05mph
Words: 999

I can't say I've ever been diagnosed as having attention deficit disorder, but I do have a short attention span. Novelty seeking behavior, which the internet affords seemingly limitless rewards.

The Monarch RE-760 arrived and it cleaned up very nicely. Love the way it looks. I'll take a pic one of these days.

It works, but it's pretty deaf on the low end of the AM (or MW for "medium wave" for the radio geeks) band. I've got my eye on another one. If I'm successful, I'll pull the chassis out of one and see if I can restore its hearing.

Goodwill's online auction site is another rabbit hole. I've got two little nonsense radios inbound. One is one of those hand-cranked "emergency" radios. The other is an old general purpose, large portable with AM, FM and weather band coverage, which, frankly, I didn't need. Reasonable price though, comparing it to eBay.

Typing random search terms into Goodwill's site can provide endless hours of entertainment. I missed an opportunity to get a Tivoli Model One for about $50 last night; because one thing led to another ("Ohh! What's that???"), and I forgot about it because I didn't set up a reminder.

Snipers exist on Goodwill. The interface isn't as responsive as ebay, so it's tricky to time it well. And for some reason, most of their auctions end after my bedtime. So I slept on the Model One. It went for $36, which seems like a great price, but that can be deceptive with Goodwill. You always have to estimate the shipping cost before you bid. It varies widely. That particular store was reasonable, so the radio would have cost, with shipping and "handling," about $50, which I think was reasonable for that specimen. The finish on the cabinet was near perfect for a radio that was about 18 years old. There's a nearly identical one on eBay listed for $50, with $15 shipping, with a scratched up top. It's a local seller, so I might be able to arrange local pickup. We'll see.

There was a $45 Model One on eBay with $15 shipping, also in very good shape. Listing said it accepted offers. Seller had zero feedback and no other items listed. I submitted an offer for $40, and the item was taken down.

The cause of my distraction was part of an Elegoo robot car kit. I didn't know what that was, so I had to do some "research." It's an incomplete kit, but it includes the cpu. A newer version, complete, is $55.00 an Amazon, so once you factor in shipping on it, as a "spares" purchase, it's not a remarkable deal.

But I did end up buying a new one on Amazon. Why? I don't know.

I spent some time studying the manuals of my two Sangean HD radios. I have the tiny portable HDR-14 and a table top HDR-18. The smaller one has memory for 20 preset stations, while the HDR-18 only has 10. The 18 is much easier to program than the 14. It wasn't clear from either manual if you could store individual HD channels for a given station. It turns out you can. It can take several seconds for the digital channel to decode though, so give it some time.

I mostly use the digital channels with the local public radio station, WJCT. They offer three digital channels, one of which is the Electro Lounge, which I like to listen to.

The RF-2200 went off to be re-capped on Wednesday, should arrive at the service today, I'll check the tracking on that. Good communication with the guy who's going to do the work, so I'm optimistic.

Inside Saul Hall (our house) isn't a very friendly radio environment. There's a lot of electronic noise from the LED lighting, and the roof decking has an aluminum foil backing to help lower the temperature in the attic. It does better as a faraday cage than an IR barrier, in my opinion. But Mitzi's recently completed screened addition, with comfortably upholstered chairs, has made a nice space to play around with radios outside. Antennas will remain a challenge due to HOA rules and penetrations, but it's better than being inside the house.

Mitzi told me that a member of the women's club that she serves with on a committee is an amateur radio operator. That surprised me a bit. If so, and if she's active, it may facilitate making arrangements for taking a license exam. We'll see.

I've been keeping up with mailing a card to mom every day. I need to start paying attention to which photos I've sent her. I don't keep individual files of every card, just replace the image in the same file for a given card size. Feels pretty good getting some use out of these expensive photo printers I've had for many years.

In other news, I'm reading Aftermath: Life in the Fallout of the Third Reich , by Harald Jähner and Shaun Whiteside. It's less sensational than Savage Continent, which I stopped reading about halfway through, but equally depressing.

There must be a whole area of academic study on the matter of "truth and reconciliation," for lack of a better term. How human beings come to terms with their inhumanity to one another, even if those terms are largely unsatisfactory. We have our colonial past, killing and displacing indigenous people, and slavery, which we seem largely incapable of confronting. The Balkans, Rwanda, Cambodia, South Africa, Armenia, the list goes on.

It feels like the general response by those responsible is to ignore it, bury it, suppress it.

Perhaps thereby, inevitably, to repeat it.

"Never again?"

Germany, publicly at least, appears to be the exception. But I'm not sure how genuine it is.

A post for another day I think.

I'll close on that happy note, and go take a walk. I think I'll need pants. It's a little chilly this morning.

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A Quick Test For Mark

12:29 Saturday, 11 March 2023
Current Wx: Temp: 67.73°F Pressure: 1010hPa Humidity: 49% Wind: 8.05mph
Words: 9

Just checking some export behavior here. Nothing to see.

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Night Sky

05:52 Monday, 11 March 2024

Current Wx: Temp: 51.46°F Pressure: 1017hPa Humidity: 57% Wind: 9.22mph
Words: 22

From GOES East SE Sector at 0521 EDT

Yesterday I learned about this site, and now I have several bookmarks in my Climate bookmarks folder.

The peak of our civilization.

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Overhead

05:57 Monday, 11 March 2024

Current Wx: Temp: 51.46°F Pressure: 1017hPa Humidity: 57% Wind: 9.22mph
Words: 68

Wood Stork enjoying some afternoon thermals

Did a late walk yesterday, in the afternoon. There were several birds overhead, including a vulture and a swallow tailed kite, but these wood storks are always impressive. Only had the 14-150mm on the OM-5 with me. I'm just going to start carrying the 75-300mm with me from now on. Maybe stuff a compact in a pocket if anything wider looks appealing.

Lovely day yesterday.

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Geekin' Out

06:01 Monday, 11 March 2024
Current Wx: Temp: 51.46°F Pressure: 1017hPa Humidity: 57% Wind: 9.22mph
Words: 616

The log project has prompted some renewed interest in computer stuff. There was a time when I found all of this fascinating, but in the last several years I guess I've grown jaded, or just old, and it's all been just frustrating.

It's still a little frustrating, but it feels as though it might not be entirely out of reach.

Captain's Log has produced Midwatch entries at 01:16 this morning and yesterday morning. Not quite midnight, but close enough for my purposes.

I know I need to create a prototype for Midwatch, because I don't want every "entry" to inherit the "run command" feature. But I can assign the Midwatch prototype the p_Entry prototype (prototypes can inherit prototypes). The only thing the p_Entry prototype does, for now, is set the Displayed Attributes for an entry, including $Created (date and time entry was made) and a couple of $URL attributes, so those are always visible in every entry.

I made plans to go visit Mom in April yesterday, and I was logging all the confirmation emails for the flight, the hotel and the rental car. The 14" MPB will accompany me, so the log is available, though not exactly as accessible as if it were on an iPad or something.

Another idea is to automatically create a weekly "Review" note, in part as a prompt, but maybe it will consolidate some data as well. Maybe as an agent, so it's not a new "entry" every week, but something at the top of the Log to go through. Haven't fully thought it out yet, but it's in mind.

Still casting about for something for the Midwatch entry to do, I decided to see if there was some kind of command line interface to the ARANet4. Seems like there might be, but I have to figure out how to do all this Python stuff. So that's a project for the next few days. Learn about Terminal and Python, maybe get the iMac talking to the sensor. I have the app on my phone, and of course the vendor doesn't offer any Shortcuts integrations. It's not like it's vital information, it's just something for me to learn about Terminal, "run command," Tinderbox, Python and so on. I'd also like to query my Ambient Weather weather station. I'm not sure if that's harder, but it looks harder. Need an API and stuff. Later maybe.

And do I want to download a small GOES image every night? Why? Well, maybe because I can? I don't know. Thinking about it. Which is a distraction from figuring out all the ARANet4 stuff. "Too many mind."

Anyhow, kind of excited.

Oh, I listened to a Mac Power Users podcast last night while the women were watching The Academy Awards. Couple of things struck me. CRIMP, which dates back 18 years or more. Been there, done that. Decided to stick with Tinderbox a few years ago, as it's kind of stuck with me for over twenty years. This Rules thing seemed kind of interesting. Not exactly the same as attaching an Automator action to an event, but it may have some application. The guest, Ryan J.A. Murphy, also spoke about using Obsidian to capture family stories, which was kind of an eerie coincidence ("There are no coincidences."), but I think Phil Nunnally mentioned something exactly like that at the Tinderbox meetup. Maybe it's something going around in the PKM space. (A more industrious man, maybe "courteous" would be the right word, would listen to the whole thing again and find the spot where he thought Phil mentions that, and link to that moment.)

Anyway, cool podcast to listen to at 1.5x speed.

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BBC News

06:59 Monday, 11 March 2024
Current Wx: Temp: 49.8°F Pressure: 1017hPa Humidity: 59% Wind: 9.22mph
Words: 37

BBC News has an excellent RSS feed. Some duplication, but not much. Stories fairly consistently interesting and worthwhile, no bullshit. While there are the occasional stories of local tragedies, they are interesting without being morbid or prurient.

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Subscribed!

07:25 Monday, 11 March 2024
Current Wx: Temp: 49.19°F Pressure: 1018hPa Humidity: 60% Wind: 6.91mph
Words: 21

Bit of a Dr. Drang vibe, and consistently interesting if often over my head. New to me, now maybe to you.

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Local News

07:28 Monday, 11 March 2024
Current Wx: Temp: 49.01°F Pressure: 1018hPa Humidity: 60% Wind: 6.91mph
Words: 67

"All politics is local." Which is why local news is so important. We're still relatively fortunate here in northeast Florida that we have some good local news outlets. May not always be that way, but for the moment...

Speaking of "prurient," sometimes local history is newsworthy, or at least, interesting.

And this reminds me that I need to fire up Notes From the Underground ("It's darker here").

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Breakfast of Champions

09:56 Monday, 11 March 2024

Current Wx: Temp: 55.15°F Pressure: 1024hPa Humidity: 55% Wind: 8.05mph
Words: 233

Photo of a colorful breakfast

Kind of a "cheese sandwich" post, almost literally, for any who recall what those were.

I'm a creature of habit, so I don't have to think too much. I have this nearly every morning as long as I'm not in a hurry or out of something. It's two extra-large Eggland's Best eggs, a few sliced baby bella mushrooms, a large handful of spinach, black beans, turmeric, black pepper, avocado and hot sauce.

Basically, sauté the shrooms and the spinach (you can just put a cover over the pan, it'll take a while) while you're mixing the eggs, turmeric and black pepper in a bowl. The turmeric will clump up and stick to the side of the bowl, but the spinach takes care of that. Add the beans, and after the spinach is reduced and bright green, put it in with the eggs and stir well.

Pour that whole thing back into the same 8" frying pan, cover and go slice your avocado and do some cleanup. By the time you're done slicing the 'cado, washing the bowl and spatula and putting those away, it's probably done.

Slide it onto a plate, add hot sauce and eat. Might need to let it cool.

I used to make it with shredded cheese, but I decided that was unhealthy so I substituted spinach. It tastes great and ensures I don't get hungry until after noon.

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Breakfast of Champions Part Deux

10:08 Monday, 11 March 2024

Current Wx: Temp: 56.01°F Pressure: 1020hPa Humidity: 56% Wind: 5.99mph
Words: 55

Wood stork caugth catching its breakfast.

Before I had my breakfast, this wood stork had its. Brought the OM-1 with the 75-300 this morning. It was 50°F, so I wore a sweatshirt and my vest, which has nice pockets, into which I stuffed the OM-5 with the 14-42mm EZ pancake zoom. Fits well. Double-OM morning.

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Florida

10:29 Monday, 11 March 2024

Current Wx: Temp: 57.25°F Pressure: 1020hPa Humidity: 53% Wind: 8.05mph
Words: 113

Better living with chemistry? Airboat in a retention pond spraying chemicals to counteract the effects of other chemicals

Kind of a nothing shot (with the OM-5), except for the story it tells. I'm sure the guy must go to larger retention ponds where an air boat isn't as absurd. At least it's a small one, and very quiet.

But what he's doing there is spraying chemicals into the retention pond to control (prevent) the growth of algae and unwanted aquatic vegetation which thrive because of the fertilizer we spray onto our lawns.

It's a self-licking ice cream cone for the landscape and chemical fertilizer and herbicide industries.

But you tell me over and over and over again my friend Ah, you don't believe we're on the eve of destruction

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Tripping Around the Blogosphere

11:07 Monday, 11 March 2024
Current Wx: Temp: 59.05°F Pressure: 1021hPa Humidity: 51% Wind: 11.5mph
Words: 170

Jack is posting from the future! ("We're livin' in the future and none of this has happened yet.") I note that Jack's post claim's it's 15:20, while here in slow lane it's only 11:09. (I have screenshots, Jack!)

Garrett likes cedar waxwings, as do I, but I really dig decay. It's been nice seeing Loren posting on the regular. Bird photos always welcome. We have snipes here too.

AKMA is putting in his miles, one foot in front of the other, tending souls and soles, as it were.

I started following Chris Wiegman a year or so ago, I think, while he still lived in Florida. I'm pleased to know he's, literally, "in a better place." Florida can bring ya down. Life is weird, and all we really have are moments to live, and each other.

One Foot Tsunami (Paul Kafasis) is a reliable source of worthwhile links. And yes, 50% of people have below average intelligence. I think. "Median," "average," I get confused.

I love the blogosphere.

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Like, "Nobody could have foreseen this..."

12:27 Monday, 11 March 2024
Current Wx: Temp: 61.32°F Pressure: 1025hPa Humidity: 50% Wind: 11.5mph
Words: 185

Don't move to Florida.

And if you can leave, get out.

While there's still time and people dumb enough to buy your place. This doesn't get better.

The "insurance reforms" are all in favor of the insurance companies and to the significant disadvantage of the insured. You may think you have insurance. You may have the receipts for all the premiums you paid. Good luck collecting on your claim. The board is tilted in favor of the insurance companies.

Almost because it has to be. Or there would be no insurance here. And therefore, no mortgages. And therefore, no housing market.

For now, I'm pretty confident USAA will be good to us. But I don't know for how long. There's a lot of activity duty and retired military in Florida. I don't know how much of USAA's portfolio is located here.

If I could, I'd leave.

And this was all entirely foreseeable. The article doesn't maintain that it wasn't, but it's the excuse I can already hear from the Republican Party of Florida, which has owned and operated the state for more than a generation.

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Things To Do

07:59 Tuesday, 11 March 2025
Current Wx: Temp: 47.48°F Pressure: 1013hPa Humidity: 87% Wind: 6.91mph
Words: 229

So the fix for the backup camera recall on the 2024 Ford Maverick has been released. I'll touch base with the dealer later today and see about when they expect the vehicle to be ready.

Doc says no problem getting a measles vaccination, at least health-wise. Now to figure out where I can get one, I think they mostly come as an MMR cocktail.

When I spoke to Mom on Sunday, she couldn't recall whether I'd had the measles or not. But I recall some of my siblings having them. She said she thought I did get the vaccination. I could probably go dig out my navy medical record, which I think reaches back at least to commissioning, which should have my vaccinations entered. I haven't sealed that box yet, but I think it's probably better safe than sick and just get the shot.

I've got to sort out the USB cable and charger issue before I decide to pull the trigger on the OM-3. I have a charger for the E-PL10. I think the E-P7 came with an Olympus USB-charger, and I think the OM-5 only came with a cable, but I need to check. I packed most of the USB stuff up, but it's in a Ridgid tool box, so it should be easy to find.

Anyway, the beat goes on...

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Action Taken

17:31 Tuesday, 11 March 2025
Current Wx: Temp: 75.45°F Pressure: 1013hPa Humidity: 37% Wind: 6.91mph
Words: 216

I'm putting the OM-3 on hold until I get to New York, or later. I shouldn't watch the news, but I do. So I just sent another $100 to VoteVets, and $100 to Senator Mark Kelly. I expect I'll be sending more in the weeks and months to come.

It's clear that they're going to dismantle Social Security. They're laying the rhetorical groundwork through lies and propaganda. They have until the midterms to get it done, so they're going to press hard. Musk just full-on bullshitting us as if we're stupid.

Maybe public opinion will be enough to stop them, but it feels like they're just going to ignore it and keep going. It may be their last best shot for undoing the New Deal and the Great Society programs, Social Security and Medicare.

When they tell you they are not going to cut Social Security and Medicare, don't believe them. They're going to do it.

And they're perfectly capable of betraying every veteran, just as they have Ukraine and the western alliance. And they will when they cut 80,000 VA employees. They'll make it harder for veterans to access benefits they've earned and deserve.

When I said this was going to be a category six shitstorm, I didn't know that half of it.

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The Big Lie

17:51 Tuesday, 11 March 2025
Current Wx: Temp: 75.06°F Pressure: 1013hPa Humidity: 38% Wind: 6.91mph
Words: 151

What's going on with Musk and DOGE with regard to entitlements is the same playbook as "stop the steal."

It's the "big lie." They are just going to flat-out lie about egregious levels of fraud and waste in these programs, and every elected Republican will repeat the lies, night after night on Fox and NewsMax and right-wing talk radio.

They're lying because they have to. They're lying because they know it works. They've cowed the mainstream media, and they know right-wing media will repeat the message on an endless loop.

It's a lie. It's all lies.

There is not mainstream media counterweight to this. If this is to be stopped, it's going to have to be person to person. Call out the lies. If someone repeats the lie, tell them it's a lie. Tell them they're being played for fools. Don't just ignore it to "keep the peace."

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Further to the Foregoing

09:10 Wednesday, 11 March 2026
Current Wx: Temp: 57.56°F Pressure: 1009hPa Humidity: 90% Wind: 10.02mph
Words: 100

If you're the kind of person who cares about the rule of law, and the role of international law, here's a nuanced piece (which is a nice way of saying there are things in here that I agree with, and things that I don't agree with) addressing Trump's Iran war and the role of international law.

It's long, has a lot of links, refers to many people you and I have never heard of before, but generally seems well informed, reasonable, troubling and encouraging.

It'll also help you fall asleep.

But the bottom line is International law is not "fake."

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The "Good Old Days"

09:35 Wednesday, 11 March 2026
Current Wx: Temp: 58.64°F Pressure: 1008hPa Humidity: 91% Wind: 12.46mph
Words: 729

I get an email from the U.S. Naval Institute every other day or so. This morning's had a link to an article from May 1988 about the tanker war in the Persian Gulf. Not included in this piece is an incident I was involved in aboard USS STEPHEN W. GROVES (FFG-29).

We were frequently (nearly always) assigned to operate in the Straits of Hormuz Western Patrol Area (SOHWPA), aka "The Junkyard," because there were so many damaged and abandoned tankers anchored in the area. After STARK was hit, our deployment was extended to backfill STARK, though we didn't have LINK-11, which is why STARK typically patrolled in the northern gulf operating area. She linked with the AWACS that was usually airborne out of Saudi Arabia.

One afternoon, a French flagged tanker was beginning to transit the straits outbound to the Gulf of Oman, and an Iranian Hengham-class LST was operating nearby. It began to approach the French vessel and our XO, my friend Rick Hoffman, was on the bridge observing the LST. He called the captain and reported that he observed the crew of the LST manning their guns. I believe they had some 37mm anti-aircraft mounts, but I'd have to check that.

We were steaming in Condition III, wartime steaming, which meant that all weapons stations were manned and we could fight the ship. At that time, I believe we also maintained one repair locker fully manned, and the material condition of the ship was set a Modified Zebra (maximum watertight integrity, chemical, biological and radiological defense). Basically that meant ventilation was largely running normally because it's the Persian Gulf, and we had some scuttles open so people could move about the ship more readily.

The captain came to Combat, I was on watch as the Tactical Action Officer. We maneuvered to place ourselves between the tanker and the LST. We had no authorization to "protect" or "defend" a foreign flagged vessel, but the skipper, Billy Cornett, was a pretty aggressive guy. The Iranians were training their mounts in azimuth (horizontally), and pausing when they bore on us. The XO also noted that the sailors manning the mounts were in flash gear and helmets.

At this point the captain is calling the shots in Combat, and he orders a fire control track on the LST. This is largely undetectable by the target as it's merely a "track while scan" function of the surface fire control radar, part of the Mark 92 fire control system. We weren't "illuminating" them with a dedicated fire control radar. We brought our 75mm gun to Ready Alert Air and selected VT Frag as the ammunition, proximity fused fragmentation rounds. They would kill anyone on deck, like those guys in the open mounts. That causes the gun barrel to elevate from the horizontal stow position, but otherwise doesn't move the mount. Had we assigned the gun to the track it would have trained to the bearing of the LST, which might have been interpreted by the Iranians as "hostile intent." But if they were paying attention, they would have seen the barrel elevate and known that it was at some heightened state of readiness.

We had a somewhat ambiguous ROE situation with regard to hostile intent on the part of the Iranians, but we were just seconds away from putting rounds on target if the ambiguity resolved itself.

The LST called us on VHF bridge-to-bridge and asked us if we were escorting the French flagged vessel. We had a bridge-to-bridge radio in Combat and the captain replied that we were just conducting normal operations in international waters, which was a true statement.

This situation remained for several minutes as I recall, eventually resolving as the LST turned away and began steaming away from the tanker. We remained in proximity for some time after that.

Because this was a significant event, we had to send an urgent OPREP-3 Navy Blue to COMIDEASTFOR, which outlined the sequence of events and our actions.

We later received an informal reprimand from COMIDEASTFOR for not taking the LST under fire. The captain was somewhat pissed, as he thought the mission was to maintain peace in the operating area.

We also received a signal from the French tanker, thanking us for our service.

Just another day in the Persian Gulf.

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