Now in .gif format
(It's always been in the rotation)
Argh some of us behind enemy lines need to fight for the beautiful pacific NW- you cant have my state!
American Actor Jack Wagner’s 27-Year-Old Son Found Dead in Los Angeles Parking Lot – Cause of Death Still Under Investigation
On Monday morning, “General Hospital” stars Jack and Kristina Wagner’s youngest son Harrison was found dead in a Los Angeles parking lot.
According to the L.A. County Medical Examiner-Coroner report obtained by PEOPLE, Harrison was pronounced dead at the scene at 5:14 a.m. local time in the 11200 block of Chandler Boulevard in the San Fernando Valley suburb of North Hollywood.
Based on the initial report from the medical examiner, no cause of death for Harrison Wagner was given.
The spokesperson for the L.A. Coroner’s Office released another statement this week saying that the cause of Harrison’s death requires more investigation and is listed as “deferred.”
“Cause of death is deferred,” the spokesperson told PEOPLE. “Deferred means that after an autopsy, a cause of death has not been determined and the medical examiner is requesting more investigation into the death, including additional studies.”
“Once the tests/studies come back, the doctor evaluates the case again and makes the cause of death determination,” the statement concludes.
More from Fox News:
Jack Wagner was spotted for the first time since his son’s death.
Wagner was wearing a gray Nike athletic shirt and jeans in photos obtained by Fox News Digital.
Since Harrison’s death, his brother and ex-girlfriend have paid tribute via social media. Peter Wagner shared a carousel of photos and captioned the post, “Always with you.”
Sophia Bui, his former girlfriend, also shared a photo of herself and Harrison on social media.
“Seven years, on and off, round and round we loved each other,” she wrote. “For better or for worse. In sickness and in health. Sorry, I missed yr calls in the middle of the night these last few days. I miss sleeping in yr pola bear arms, curled up. I miss sending you silly animal videos. I miss you sending gorgeous songs that made me cry.
“I was never alone in this world with you. You were the balm that soothed my soul. You were my guy. I hope I was that comfort for you. I will always be yr babe. I will always choose to love you in this world and in any other life.”
Harrison struggled with drug addiction in the past, but it’s unclear if substance abuse played a part in his death.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/06/american-actor-jack-wagners-27-year-old-son-found-dead-los-angeles-parking-lot-cause-death-still-investigation/
China’s new Mars images show off the country’s robust (but secretive) space program
Stefanie Waldek / 12:34 PM CDT July 1, 2022
With a $24 billion budget and dozens of active, high-profile missions, it’s not surprising that NASA is the most visible of the dozens of government space agencies in the world. But China’s space program is a rapidly developing superpower that, whether it’s due to political tensions or the government’s careful control of information, doesn’t often get its fair share of attention.
Just this week, the China National Space Administration (CNSA) released a series of high-resolution images of Mars taken by its Tianwen-1 spacecraft, which arrived at the Red Planet in February 2021 and has been orbiting it ever since. Over the course of more than 1,300 orbits, Tianwen-1 has photographed the entire planet in extreme detail, from the icy south pole to the 2,485-mile-long Valles Marineris canyon to the 59,055-foot-tall shield volcano Ascraeus Mons.
While the U.S. has the reliable Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and other spacecraft have imaged the planet over the years, the full-surface survey by China’s program will be valuable to scientists and colony planners across the world if the country releases the imagery widely. But this is just the latest success of a thriving space program that has ambitious goals over the next five years — and it might not even be its most impressive one.
The fact that Tianwen-1 even made it to Mars is remarkable, as it was China’s first solo interplanetary mission. (China participated in a failed joint mission with Russia, Phobos-Grunt/Yinghuo-1, which launched in 2011 but did not leave Earth orbit.) Overall, Mars missions, from flybys to orbiters to landers, have about a 50% success rate, according to NASA.
https://techcrunch.com/2022/07/01/chinas-new-mars-pictures-tianwen-1/