an acceptance of the governmental structure and the status quo. To vote is to accept the evils that plague society. Free will and self-government, the Dominance of Choice and the Social Condition. What is it that determines a person's actions? Are the actions of an individual determined by the dictates of law and government or, rather, is an individual compelled to act in certain ways for other reasons? Can a person's actions truly be controlled by the constraints set forth by the law? What is it that influences a person's actions? Can law, a vast and confusing set of governmental dictates, truly hold more influence over a person's actions than can their own moral ideologies? Can an individual, who must make decisions on a daily basis, constantly turn to law for behavioral guidance? Individual actions are not compelled by the law but rather by morality and by an individual's personal belief of what is right. Human behavior is driven by choice. Law attempts to take away that choice; law attempts to prevent people from having the ability to control their own actions. Law intends to make behavioral decisions for the people rather than allowing them to make their own moral choices. It is here that law infringes upon the most basic rights of the human race and where law violates the natural gifts of mankind. Law attempts to automatize mankind by relieving individuals from the "burden" of making their own decisions. Choice must always dominate over law, but choice can be over-ridden by environment. Regardless of moral ideology an individual can be compelled, indeed forced, to act contrary to their moral beliefs when faced with unacceptable social circumstances over which they have no control. Law, while seeking to eradicate personal choice, maintains the social ills that circumvent moral ideology. Law seeks to make the individual nothing more than an automaton; programmed by governmental dictates and compelled by environmental conditions. For...