I'd guess I have to point out, dawkins what appears for you, to be atypical incongruencies On the one hand you infer, that since the Universe had a provable beginning that it will have a big crunch. No studies I've seen infer that at all. Current guestimates are that the universe will continue to expand and in fact expand at even a faster rate than it is now. Then you propose to curlyfilm that since the universe had a beginning it is not never ending and wouldn't be able to expand, because, circularily, it had a beginning. Although the current measurement of the size of the universe (width wise) is 156 billions of light years it's also known that this is a temporary measurement since the thing being measured is still expanding exponentially with no indication of ever slowing. In fact a sub-link in your posted link discusses that very aspect. The last paragraph in the sub-link is instructive..." The acceleration is likely to continue, most of them believe, until galaxies recede from one another at the speed of light and can no longer be seen. One new theory goes further, suggesting that every speck of matter in the cosmos will ultimately be torn apart in a universe-ending Big Rip."
Usually, you are quite succinct, but this latest of yours doesn't make a lot of sense, at least as stated... no? (To much coffee, maybe?) As a quick addendum, most astrophysicists, at least in my limited perusals, don't agree that the "... universe was squashed into a singularity..." most agree that it came into being ex nihilo... and then attempt to explain the consequences so implied...