Of course - folks like Kent Hovind, et al.
I’ve tried to follow the posts where free-will was being discussed, but I’m still undecided about what my take on it is.
Here’s a simple “for instance”:
It’s Saturday evening, late, and I’m just about to go to bed.
I decide that, for a change, I’ll go to MacDonalds on Sunday morning for breakfast. Yup - I like to live dangerously, sometimes.

However, when I wake up on Sunday, the weather is blowing a gale, with torrential rain, so I say,” Sod that for a game of soldiers. I’m going back to bed”.
This being Britain, though, by about 09:00 the sun’s out, there’s no wind or rain and it’s a beautiful morning.
So I get up and head off for a MacMuffin or similar.
Now, looked at from my perspective, I could say that I’ve exercised my free will three times.
Let’s now take a step back for the wider perspective - assuming that God exists and he’s fully loaded with all of the omnis.
Clearly, He would have known that I was going to make these decisions.
Now, for me, comes the difficult bit. If He had decided that I ought to eat a MacMuffin, so made me change my mind after fixing the weather, then I’d have to suggest that I really didn’t have free-will, only the illusion of it.
However, if all He has is foreknowledge of my actions and doesn’t interfere, then maybe I do have free-will. Effectively, a disinterested omniscient being who took no advantage of foreknowledge would not be in control of my decisions.
It's a bit like a parent telling a child “Don’t touch that hot pan” and knowing what the kid’s most likely next action will be! The parent knows what’s going to happen, but the child’s free-will isn’t constrained. Bad analogy, I know.
As I said, I’m still undecided about this - but thanks to you all for the discussion so far - I have something new to think about!