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Sins of the Fathers by Will Cunningham
Sins of the Fathers by Will Cunningham













Wade.* If there is any truth to the adage, "what comes around goes around", it is found in Cunningham's searing prophecy of a society where twenty-five is middle-aged and euthanasia has become the chief means of reducing surplus population.As I read Dave Hunt’s latest book, What Love is This? subtitled, “Calvinism’s Misrepresentation of God,” I felt both profound sadness and righteous anger.

Sins of the Fathers by Will Cunningham

When his father's termination date comes up and his mother re-enters his life, Nash must grapple with forgiveness, love, and eventually the heart and will of God as he races to save his father.* Addresses the abortion issue and makes readers re-think their view of Roe vs. With reproduction done mechanically in a lab and the citizens being terminated for the "greater good" life and love have lost all meaning.Into this bleak setting steps tag man, John Nash, an unlikely and unwilling hero whose father wrote the Supreme Court majority opinion that made euthanasia mandatory. Those who resist are hunted down by tag men. It is the responsibility of each citizen to willingly be terminated at age 50. In the year 2038, abortions are the long-accepted means of population control, and euthanasia has become a means for cutting enormous health care costs. Wade.* If there is any truth to the adage, "what comes around goes around", it is found in Cunningham's searing prophecy of a society where twenty-five is middle-aged and euthanasia has become the chief means of reducing surplus population.

Sins of the Fathers by Will Cunningham













Sins of the Fathers by Will Cunningham