I mean, you're welcome to call me a liar. The belief of strangers on the internet doesn't really impact me IRL. There is a reason why housing in Vancouver was the focus of the provincial election and continues to be a daily issue with multiple stories every day for several years at this point, and it's not because of yuppies. It is a landlord's market where most landlords are homeowners who built their house into suites because there would have been no way to afford living in the city otherwise. As a result, that makes it so that A) if you say 'no' to a landlord, you should be prepared to leave, and B) landlords possess the control in any social dynamic.
Can I say 'no' and put my foot down? Absolutely. No one can force me to do anything. Can I say 'no' and expect no retribution? Nope. These are landlords that walk into my unit whenever they please and use my space as personal storage and have threatened eviction in the past if I didn't comply with what is ordinarily an illegal request. You'd be right that this isn't acceptable, that I should say 'no', that I should go somewhere else, but the reality of the situation is that I
can't do that, so placating unreasonable people is my best path to staying where I am. Two or three more years and I can leave this city.
That's why I only complain about it as an add-on to other people's stories instead of clogging up valuable space with constant independent complaints.

It's unlikely that anyone 'gets' it since they don't live here or simply haven't been in my position anywhere else, so there isn't much to say.
Anyways, your question is wrong. It's not "do physical labour for me when I demand it and I won't evict you", it's "do what I say when I say,
because of the implication".