I was similarly excited when I saw you were LDS ghills.
I didn't say freedom to break laws Rolan. Freedom to CHOOSE to break laws. The consequence of that choice is less mortal freedom. You get stuck in a prison or something similar.
Also, thank you for the name correction guys.
Just to be clear, you're talking about the "freedom" to commit crimes but be arrested and punished for them. Or more generally, to revolt against authority even if it immediately gets you incarcerated and reeducated or killed. I don't consider that actual freedom, but I see how it could be considered such.
The God of the Bible engineers situations with perfect foreknowledge, encourages people via threats or promises, and sometimes outright changes people's minds. Assuming he's omniscient and can use these powers freely, we don't even have the "freedom" to defy him that you're talking about. The Pharaoh was directly denied free will in regard to Moses. God repeatedly "hardened the Pharaoh's heart", stopping him from letting the Israelites go until Egypt had suffered enough. That's just the least subtle example, though. If the Pharaoh had made those decisions without God's mind control, he still wouldn't have been free will - whatever decision he made, God was standing ready to change his mind. The Pharaoh had no meaningful choice.
And just because God doesn't use that power often (or does he?) doesn't mean our choices are free. If a human is going to make a decision he doesn't like, he'll know, and he can prevent it through inspiration, threats, or direct control. Just as he did in the Bible. There's no actual freedom to defy him... He just usually allows it to happen. And a society is not free just because the tyrant shows mercy.