I'll try to be quick in my answer.
The United States has a robust publishing industry. It has an incredible content or entertainment industry, probably the strongest in the world. It has educational fair dealing. The U.S. copyright law says that you may fair deal for purposes “such as”; it lists some, but you can do other things. It's broadly accepted there that education falls within that. It's set out in certain guidelines, including the right to make multiple mechanical copies of a work for classroom use.
There's no indication that Bill C-32 is heading even remotely in that direction, but that's the standard in the United States. They allow that; they still have authors; they still have writers; they still have all kinds of cultural activities going on. To suggest that Canada moving even modestly in that direction is somehow going to cause the sky to fall is just ludicrous.