But an explanation which presumes that all our conscious choices are pre determined before we are consciously aware of them does not make sense, because in order to reach such a conclusion it is essential to be able to drive your own thought processes.
The role of consciousness is really beside the point. You've once again thrown together some words without any apparent thought(!). How do you "drive your own thought processes"? What does that mean that is incompatible with everything happening entirely due to the things that led to them?
The "you" has to consist of something and it has to make its "driving" choices either entirely due to what led up to the choices or not, which means there is some randomness, for reasons I've explained endless times and you've just ignored.
Without this ability, whatever conclusions you reach will have no validity.
You haven't actually defined an ability.
For any conclusion to be viable, you need the ability to consciously validate it - otherwise it will be just an unavoidable, meaningless reaction.
There you go again. How does "conscious validation" work? How is it incompatible with everything happening entirely because of the reasons that led to it? How do you avoid randomness if that is not the case?
You seem to have two major blind spots: you can't seem to get that consciousness might happen after the fact and not be as involved as it seems, and you don't seem to understand that just because something is your own "conscious choice" doesn't mean that it can't have happened entirely due to the reasons that led to it.
Until you dare to think about those things you won't get anywhere.