Wes Fryer records episode four of the Heal Our Culture podcast from Charlotte, North Carolina on February 15, 2026, framing it as a “letter to the future” for his unborn grandchildren. He shares a story from a November 2017 trip to Cairo, Egypt to speak at the Ed Forum conference, including visiting the pyramids, the Sphinx, and the Cairo Museum, and learning about the historic Hotel Mena meeting before the 1945 Yalta Conference. He credits the trip’s guidance and context to Ahmed Ragheb, a retired U.S. Air Force colonel and family friend (Muslim married to a Jewish wife), whose career connects to Wes’s father’s Vietnam-era F-4 service and later pilot training leadership; Wes also recalls the Iranian hostage crisis era at Columbus Air Force Base. Wes recounts Ahmed’s explanation of Egypt’s post–Arab Spring politics, noting Mohamed Morsi’s 2012–2013 presidency and the subsequent military takeover that preceded President Abdel Fattah el‑Sisi’s rule beginning in 2014, and uses this to reflect on democracy’s fragility and the dangers of populism. He connects these themes to the United States in February 2026, describing concerns about rising authoritarianism, voter suppression, and challenges to democratic institutions, and references recent killings of U.S. citizens in Minneapolis by federal agents and reports of masked, unbadged arrests and detentions, including incidents in Charlotte. Wes describes his own oath to defend the U.S. Constitution as a 1992 U.S. Air Force Academy graduate, his path out of pilot training and into education, and his ongoing media literacy work since 2019, including the “Conspiracies and Culture Wars” inquiry project (medialiteracy.wesfryer.com/concw) and his effort to “reclaim our news feeds” through news.wesfryer.com using Flipboard and a Federated Reader project built with AI. He cites polarized narratives around the January 6 insurrection, presidential pardons for those involved, disputes over the 2020 election, and differing accounts across platforms as reasons for prioritizing trusted sources. He also points listeners to the “Wes and Shelly Share” podcast (episode 39) discussing snow days and resistance work, including involvement with Indivisible and Indivisible Charlotte through Caldwell Presbyterian Church. The episode closes with a call to be “culture healers” rather than “culture warriors,” to sustain hope and community, and to defend democratic values and rights—especially voting rights—while recognizing the long historical struggle for justice highlighted during Black History Month.
00:00 Welcome + Why These “Letters from Granddad Fryer” Matter
01:46 Cairo 2017: Invited to ED Forum & First Impressions of Egypt
02:26 Pyramids, Museums, and WWII History at the Hotel Mina
04:25 Meet Ahmed Ragheb: Family Connections, Service, and a Cross-Faith Marriage
07:17 Egypt’s Arab Spring Aftermath: Morsi, the Coup, and Military Rule
08:29 Democracy Is Fragile: Lessons for the U.S. in an Age of Populism
11:14 My Oath, My Path: Air Force Academy, Career Turns, and Media Literacy Work
19:11 Reclaiming the News Feed: Tools, Projects, and Competing Realities
24:47 A Letter to the Future: Hope, Black History Month, and Choosing Culture Healing
29:10 Closing: Community, Resistance, and Building a Healed World
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