Not everyone is born with a perfect knowledge of labour rights, and this should be a safe(r) place to bring up these issues and have them debated.
We're not sticklers for academic prowess and scholarly perfection here. When someone says: "Force those people to work on pain of incarceration or fines, so that I can make my money this summer!", then this is not a safe place to bring up or to debate that view. You see, every other place in this society which degrades and devalues workers is a "safe" place to spew such classist and enslaving venom - from the mainstream media, to the legislative assemblies, to the classrooms at all levels of our educational systems, you name it. Here, we have built a place, just one lousy little forum on babble, where we expect it to be taken for granted that workers are not to be treated like slaves.
If that's unacceptable to you, then I strongly suggest that you get lost.
If this is the kind of communicative tone the labour rights movement intends to have in Canada -- then I predict a poor future for it.
Oh, boo hoo, we ought to maintain some "tone" in defending one of the most basic rights a human being ought to have - to work or not to work for some boss - otherwise you, in your first post here, will look down from your pinnacle and lecture us about "toxicity". Go have a cool drink and think about what human freedom means.