So eloquent. Driving on the right side of the road and wearing a seatbelts are laws; this is a mandate. You are drawing false comparisons. There is no absolute freedom when you invoke ultimatums.
Yeah, sure I can find a new job, Ive had plenty...however Ive been invested in this one for quite some time. How would you like it if the bank said suddenly one day after years of paying into an investment, "You either do X (which youre clearly against) or we close your account without refund?"
Depending on how one uses their authority it could be a nasty word. Surely, if you looked outside your own society you would see many professionals with opinions (whatever that means) that would beg to differ. Alas, though you will seek out information to confirm your own bias.
Our laws used to condemn lots of things that are now legalized: being homosexual, smoking marijuana etc. But again this is a mandate...and Im not into dating men
"So eloquent"
Why thank you, but I get the sense that I have been 'damned with faint praise'.
There is no "absolute freedom" in Canada or, I suspect any other functioning democracy. People that like to quote the Charter often conveniently forget the very first Section:
1. Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
While I'm not aware of any element of the Covid response has been put to this test, at any level, the broad consensus holds that they would survive. Believe the expert opinions or not.
It is true that they are "mandates", but they have been issued within the general legal authorities given to employers to manage the health and safety of their workplaces and other labour laws. There will be underlying 'enabling' legislation. I'm not aware that Parliament has passed legislation surrounding the workplace use of cannabis, but employers have invoked mandates specific to the various workplaces. Like them or not.
Out of simple practicality, not every action of the State has to flow from an individual Act of Parliament (proposed Bill, three readings, committee, etc.). For example, if you want to eat in a restaurant in Ontario, the requirement to show proof of vaccination are laid out in Regulation 364/20 under the 'Reopening Ontario Act. Regulations are approved by Cabinet, not the Legislature and, by their nature, can be more responsive and dynamic.
I get it; your employer has, or is about to, impose a new workplace rule that you're not particularly thrilled with. It seems you have three choices; comply, don't comply and leave, don't comply and fight it. Your call - good luck with whichever path you choose. I'm sure you could find civilian employment that is absolutely free of any rules you don't agree with.