An Inspirational Message for November 2025 – By Charles Schokman

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Too many nations have drifted from the values that made them strong.
But something remarkable is stirring.
Across Japan, Argentina and Poland – three very different countries with very different histories – we’re seeing a quiet but unmistakable pro-family turn.
Here are three examples worth celebrating, from just the last few weeks.
Japan: Sanae Takaichi – Tradition in Modern Form
For the first time in its history, Japan has a woman as Prime Minister.
But Sanae Takaichi didn’t get the job by preaching identity politics. She won by defending family, nation and moral order.
Takaichi has been unflinching in her opposition to same-sex marriage.
She has warned that efforts to redefine the family – such as abolishing shared surnames for married couples (an issue of contention in Japan) – “may destroy the social structure built on family unity.”
Meanwhile, she’s argued that governments must make it easier, not harder, to raise children.
Whatever we think of policy specifics, any attempt to tackle Japan’s chronic population decline by valuing parents rather than penalising them deserves attention.
Takaichi is proving that a leader can be modern without being woke – that true progress means strengthening, not dismantling, the foundations of family life.
Argentina: Javier Milei’s Freedom Movement Advances
On the other side of the world, Argentina’s fiery economist-turned-president Javier Milei continues to upend expectations.
His La Libertad Avanza (Freedom Advances) movement swept recent mid-term elections, breaking the old political order that had dominated for decades.
While better known for his economic reforms, Milei has also taken a stand on moral questions.
He has called abortion “an act of aggression against the most vulnerable” and vowed to pursue a referendum to repeal Argentina’s 2020 abortion law.
In education, he champions school choice and parental control, insisting that state-imposed ideology – particularly radical gender theory in classrooms – must end. Parents, he argues, should direct the moral and intellectual formation of their children.
He also warns against what he calls “collectivist” indoctrination, insisting that freedom means more than markets – it means protecting conscience, speech and belief from government coercion.
For Argentina, long beset by socialist experiments and moral confusion, Milei’s message of life, liberty and responsibility has struck a deep chord.
His rise shows that moral clarity and liberty are not opposites. They belong together.
Poland: A Nation That Rewards Families
Meanwhile in Europe, Poland has once again shown that it takes families seriously – not just in words, but in deeds.
Recently elected President Karol Nawrocki has signed a groundbreaking measure that eliminates personal income tax, up to a defined income threshold, for parents raising two or more children.
The reform allows middle-income families to keep more of what they earn – recognising child-rearing as a social good, not a private hobby.
It’s a simple but powerful idea: when families thrive, the nation prospers.
By putting money back into the hands of mothers and fathers, Poland is working to counter the demographic decline facing Europe and affirming that children are a blessing worth investing in.
The Lesson for Australia
From Tokyo to Buenos Aires to Warsaw, the message is clear.
When nations defend life, honour parents, and strengthen marriage, they become hopeful again. When leaders stand on principle, people respond.
Here in Australia, we face the same crossroads.
Will we follow the West’s tired path of social engineering and moral confusion?
Or will we rediscover an enduring truth that has anchored every great civilisation: that the family unit – based on man, woman, and children – is the foundation of freedom?
These examples from three different continents prove that renewal is possible, but only when people of conviction refuse to stay silent.
God bless,
Image Source : austfamily.com.au
Damian Wyld
Director
Australian Family Coalition



