Produced By The National Park Service:
Specifically, the The Women’s Rights National Historical Park.

Women’s Rights National Historical Park tells the story of the first Women’s Rights Convention held in Seneca Falls, NY on July 19-20,1848. It is a story of struggles for civil rights, human rights, and equality, global struggles that continue today. The efforts of women’s rights leaders, abolitionists, and other 19th century reformers remind us that all people must be accepted as equals.
Here is a link to the Multimedia Presentations page, with links to the videos they have produced: https://www.nps.gov/wori/photosmultimedia/multimedia.htm
This is what they are doing with your tax money. Of all the religions in the world, they chose to praise Islam for its contributions to women’s rights. This was not produced by Al Qaeda, but by the U.S. National Park Service.
From The Independent Journal Review:
From the first part of the 3 videos at the 4:45 mark:
People think that Islam oppresses women and there’s no equality, but they’re wrong – there’s equity… 7th century A.D. Islam gave women the right to be involved in politics, the right to earn and keep her own money. Islam gave women the right to work outside of the home, Islam gave women the right to own property, Islam gave women the right to divorce, Islam gave women the right to choose who she marries. Islam gave women a whole bunch of rights that Western women acquired later in the 19th and 20th centuries and we’ve had these rights since the 7th century A.D. and it’s just not acknowledged worldwide.
It’s fantastic that the National Park Service is out there using taxpayer dollars to correct the false record against Muslims, such as the “moderate” Muslim Brotherhood’s scathing backlash against the UN’s Declaration on Women’s Rights. Or Muslim states’ objection to “gay rights” at a UN human rights forum – we wouldn’t want these countries to be confused with Vladimir Putin’s Russia, for Allah’s sake!
No, we certainly wouldn’t want that kind of confusion, would we?
See the rest, including additional videos, at the Independent Journal Review
