There's a real problem going on. It seems a lot of people are confused about what personal freedom means. I'm uncomfortable with the guy being prevented from flying. On the other hand, some of his passengers are Jewish, and I can fully understand why they wouldn't want to fly with someone who considers them to be terrorists.
Here's the deal, you get to do anything you want in your private life. That's your personal freedom. However, things you do may disqualify you from things in your professional life. When he's in that plane, he represents not himself, but the business that pays his wages. The business needs to protect its reputation, and to not alienate its customers. In 2023, with Social Media, people can easily link the people they're dealing with to their private lives. It can affect the businesses bottom line, so they are protecting themselves. This sounds reasonable.
Would I want my child being taught at school by a person who is on OnlyFans every night performing sex acts? No, not really. Do I feel bad about judging them? No, no I don't. I think the school could do better with hiring teachers. The person still have the freedom to do OnlyFans.
At home, sitting alone, you have all the freedom in the world. But would I want to get in a taxi with a guy who had spent the previous night arrested for DWI? Or someone who has Social Media full of drug taking and racism? No, I wouldn't.
There's a fine line, but I don't know where it is. I can imagine cases where this could be heinous - for example, I'd not be comfortable with someone being fired for their religious belief. It's a fine line, but it's not a straight one, it's jagged.