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Never again... — Buddy Murphy (@WWE_Murphy) November 1, 2019

While WWE insists the delays were solely caused by plane issues, it hasn’t done much to calm strained nerves.

Organizing Crown Jewel was controversial because it followed the widely condemned slaying in 2018 of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, in addition to a previous Saudi ban on the WWE women’s division and Canadian pro-wrestler Sami Zayn, who is of Syrian descent.

A number of the company’s athletes also boycotted the other two shows, including top stars such as John Cena.

But this isn’t the first time WWE’s ethics have caused outrage. Here are five other trip-ups:

‘People like us’

At the end of 2004, American Italian pro-wrestler Marc Copani made his company debut under the moniker Muhammad Hassan. His character despised U.S. citizens and troops for the prejudicial views and stereotypes they adopted after the September 11 attacks.

“People like us are the real victims of this war … that promotes the unfair treatment of Arab-Americans,” he said in his first TV appearance.

Hassan eventually feuded with The Undertaker, a beloved wrestling legend. But the rivalry didn’t last.

On July 4, 2005, the Undertaker beat Hassan’s accomplice, Daivari, with relative ease. After the match, Hassan dropped to his knees and spread his arms out in prayer, summoning a group of camouflage-clad masked men who beat and strangled Undertaker. The group then carried Daivari over their heads, symbolizing a martyr’s death.

Three days later, the episode aired — the same day as the London bombings, a terrorist attack that killed 52 people and wounded more than 700 others.