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What they f*ck happened in the thread section here

HOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!
Well now that I have that outta my system, Hacksaw Jim Duggan, trusts me, beat people up.
Man was someone who always, ALWAYS gotta monster pop when he came out. I remember seeing a colliseaum video of the guy and it was a show in UK (keep that in mind). So Duggan comes out to a regular pop and the roof is intact. He comes out and as was his custom would start a USA chant pre-match. Now where were we? That's right, the United Kingdom. So he says as loudly as he could 'USA, USA' twice. That's it.
And the whole place erupts in a USA chant as if they wanna say 'f*ck the Queen, we wanna be the 52nd state'! Someone dig up that video, it's insane.
Anyway the man had the fans in the palm of his fan. And it wasn't as if he was boring. He played to the crowd beautifully when he was in the ring, coming to the ring, holding the tagrope, in a sleeper hold, knocked down and then some. Man was funny as hell too. Anyone remember him hitting one of the Rougeau brothers on the back of the head with his plank and then hiding it behind back and giving the most funniest poker face to the fans? This was in a 3 man tag team with the Hart foundation.
Brilliant he was.
So why wasn't he the next Hogan or Warrior? I followed wrestling properly from 96-97 and it was primarily WWF. So I missed out on his big days and couldn't understand why he wasn't pushed as a bigger deal and then I stumbled upon this:
In early 1987, "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan jumped from Bill Watts' Universal Wrestling Federation to what was then the World Wrestling Federation. He quickly got into a feud with the Iron Sheik.
Duggan was the goofy patriot, Sheik was the evil Iranian. It was exactly what you'd expect from the WWF at that point.
On May 26th, after a show in Asbury Park, New Jersey where they had faced off in a tag team match, they went against normal wrestling protocol and carpooled together. Big mistake.
Suspecting a DUI, the police pulled them over on the New Jersey Turnpike, and both wrestlers were arrested. Duggan for marijuana possession and driving under the influence of alcohol and Sheik for possession of marijuana and cocaine.
Thanks to the two rivals driving together and revealing that pro wrestling may not be on the level, the arrests became a major national news story. Both wrestlers were fired. Duggan eventually received a a "conditional discharge" while Sheik was sentence to one year of probation.
With the mess this caused in the media, the WWF instituted drug testing for the first time, with Vince McMahon announcing to the wrestlers that "The days of a six-pack and a b*** j** are over!" according to Bret Hart.
They were only testing for cocaine, but by most accounts, the program was relatively well executed.
This incident has been cited one of the most assinine move by wrestler/s in the history that hurt the business. That is dramatic, but in the era when the whole 'Good guy vs Bad guy' myth was gospel, this thing made national news and was all over the tabloids.
So did this really keep the WWF from pushing him to the moon?