Which is unjust because if you have been given a tendency to sin, that 100% of people fail to resist, then not sinning isn't a real choice, so being condemned for it and needing to seek forgiveness is not just and fair.
Back to making us sick and then demanding health.
Being held guilty for sins you didn't commit is even more obviously unjust and unfair.
Baptism quite obviously doesn't remove the tendency to sin, so this is still unjust and unfair.
Which brings us to another point which is that your god compounds its unjust, and unfair condemnation, with hiding its message (contemptible as it is) behind ambiguity, contradiction, and a total lack of actual evidence of its truth.
So they all agree on the basic fact that we supposedly need forgiveness for being the way god made us.
As I said - it's a daft and silly story about a sadistic, unjust, and unfair god.
Again, our condition whether a tendency to sin or a partaking in that sin is not given to us by God but is a result of ancestral sin. You have been told that tendency to sin or original sin are removed by Christ. The doctrine of churches with infant baptism is that this occurs at baptism.
it cannot be argued that an infant is conscious of it's need from baptism.
Tendency to sin is not sin itself. Given that original sin and tendency to sin is dealt with in Christ there is still the question of what the catholic church would call actual sin. Sins which are committed.
In catholicism certain theologians would say that original sin not dealt with baptism leads to loss of the beatific vision.
That your picture that condemnation is solely on account of tendency to sin(for which there is no condemnation anyway) or original sin is not demonstrated biblically is that the Jewish heroes of faith, Abraham, Isaac etc had no baptism and yet the way to God is open to them.
Actual Sin is a choice I'm afraid. Since it is of commission.
The churches would disagree with you that Original sin or tendency to sin is imputed into us by God but are transmitted humanly through a fallen humanity.
The way to God is open through Jesus to all suggesting the overturn of the effect of the original ancestral sin and therefore final condemnation is by rejecting him since salvation is in him. The choice to reject is ours. Some do , some don't.
What would be fairer since to not condemn sin is neither Just or fair and rejection of forgiveness or God means inevitably not benefitting from God or his forgiveness?
The ancestors have made us sick, we then have made ourselves sick and God answers that sickness.