Work is optional. The consequences of not working might be significant depending on your situation, but there are places in the world that you are inescapably trapped in an existence less desirable than an American choosing not to work. It's funny to me how often you try to describe how things are wrong or could be better, and the better you imagine is the way things already are.
When the fear of "consequences" is institutionally built into how a society functions, you're talking about coercion.
Everyone in North Korea has freedom of speech. The consequences of saying the wrong thing might be significant depending on your situation..
I'm not really interested in the relative "desirability" or otherwise of various forms of existence. I'm certainly not into pretending that America is an autarky and that the conditions of people outside of America have no relationship whatsoever to the global economic system that supports the comparative wealth of Americans. The fact that an unemployed person person can technically survive in a developed country without starving
provided they are able to consistently satisfy the state-imposed requirements for not starving isn't really the point.
ALL work is structured coercively. It doesn't really matter if you have a job or not. You are still, almost certainly, getting fucked by people who rely on you being too afraid to quit.
That is what it means to live in a society with a capital monopoly. You work because you have no choice, because capital (a thing without inherent value that can be created on a whim) is scarce, and you don't have enough of it to have a meaningful choice about whether or not you work. The artificial scarcity of capital devalues labour, all labour, to the point of meaninglessness. Meanwhile, the people who do have enough capital to choose whether or not to work, for whom work is a hobby they sometimes play at rather than a necessity of life, take most of the material value of what you produce in the form of more capital. They get richer, you earn enough to stave off poverty (if you're lucky).
If you actually cared about work ethic or the value of labour, you would see this system for the disgusting abomination that it is, but I don't think the value of labour is what really bothers you, is it? It's the idea that we live in a society where everyone gets what they deserve, where the people at the top must be at the top by virtue of some great merit or moral worthiness that marks them out from us wretched sinners struggling to survive. I am sorry to tell you that that is a lie, and the sooner you stop believing that lie the better.