Jason has pointed out that my last message may make it seem like I am "agitated" at some poster in particular. That is not, in fact, the case.
I just honestly feel strongly about this. The only reason that I do not have a separate y/n question for every Sola lovetlk, as some have suggested, is that it would take me a bit of programming effort and the installation would be tedious. However, I include that (vaguely out of date) bit in the README specifically so that you can skip around by setting global variables. In my mind, it was the next best thing. And that section has been in the manual for ages -- this isn't some new fad of mine, this is something I have always believed.
Some have suggested that giving the user that much choice is not doing any favors for storytelling. I disagree. If you want the story as I inteded it, just say "yes" to everything. You have that choice.
This can be a difficult concept to grasp, but it is almost invariably better to get "the choice of X or not" than "X". Just consider a few examples and it starts to make sense: would you rather be forced to take a one-week expenses-paid vacation to the bahamas, or have that option? Sure, most of the time you'll take the vacation, so they seem the same. But the one time when your mother is dying in the hospital and you don't to leave the country, you'll be glad to have the choice.
Basically, the only time when "the choice of X" can be worse than "always X" is if the person is making the choices suboptimally. If you know for certain that I am always going to make better decisions than you are about what you like, than having me set "always X" is better than giving you "the choice of X".
As I started before, I don't believe that to be the case for anyone here. And since it is not, "the choice of X" is always the better call.
Consciousness and (the illusion of?) free will are some of our greatest gifts. Without the ability to think for yourself (and optionally change the world according to your will), consciousness is merely a curse that allows you to be aware of the fact that you are a slave. It is in making decisions that we define who we are.
I will not make decisions for you.