The best case and worst case scenarios... 2030 Louis Farrakhan's Nation of Islam and Tom Metzger's White Aryan Resistance have taken over America and divided the United States between them into racially segregated regimes. When one Fred Hampton Rush Senior is charged with sedition for rebelling against this new order, his sentence is to become a human guinea pig in a cryogenic experiment. Fred Rush Sr. is put into a state of suspended animation and does not awaken until... 2410 A time when the world is governed by L.S.D., a Libertarian Socialist Democracy, and Fred is being guided through this utopian future by his direct male descendant, peace officer Captain Huey P. Rush. But as Fred is riding in flying cars and being introduced to aliens, something is happening. Something that could destroy everything mankind has worked so hard for... A menace from the past threatens the future...
A.D. like all good science fiction, gives us a look into what our world could become, in time. It also gives us a chance to put ourselves in a character's shoes, and wonder, "If this happened to me, what would I do? How would I manage, in his situation?" Like all good fiction, it draws from what is happening in the author's world, and uses that as a spring board to think about the road we are on, and where it could lead.
A futuristic novel set in 2030. The U.S. has been split along color lines into the Aryan Nation of Amerikkka and the Lost-Found Nation of Islam. We follow the story of one man in the Lost-Found Nation of Islam as they discover the underground resistance.
The book then switches (via cryogenics) to the year 2450, and the author gets to show us his view of Utopia. I stopped reading because I felt the author was just using the book as a vehicle for his political ideas but not really caring about his characters or story.