Iggy:
You sound like the luster has worn off your support of President Obama, and I agree with you about the value of free speech, and the value of the medium of the internet.
Now that we know the information that US troops are guarding poppy crops, how are we able to use that information to make things better? It looks like a terrible Catch 22 to me- guard the crops and enable the enemy to finance it's operations while turning thousands of people into drug addicts, or destroy the crops and enrage the poor populace thereby encouraging them to take up arms against us (and all free states), which enables the enemy to populate it's extremist forces. It's a win-win for the Taliban and al Qaeda.
If the net result of the free press is a discouraged, jaded, and angry populace that is pissed off at the leadership and has no recourse, it's hard to see the value. It is dividing the nation and emasculating us. WWII did the opposite, uniting the nation while the only information that the populace ever received was strategically released and outdated military newsreels and theatrics.
The freedoms are being used for manipulating masses of people. Just as our existing free transport system was turned against us on 9/11, our love of free speech is being masterfully turned against us by our enemies. Masses of poor Afghans are being manipulated for revolt, masses of freedom loving Americans are being manipulated for disgust with their own government (which translates into confusion and a lack of support).
I'm not saying the press should not be free, but help me see something positive here about how the information can be applied other than protecting a theoretical freedom.
Conservatives get pissed off that the information is leaked giving the military a black eye. Liberals get pissed off that their government isn't all they dreamed of. Sooner or later somebody in a position of leadership figures out that it is not politically expedient to have a free press, and locks down the flow of information in some way or another. Spin, rinse, repeat.
Looks to me like the bottom line is that the availability of the information (as it is currently practiced, or perhaps in this limited example) ultimately leads to less freedoms. It turns people like Mr. Obama into people like Mr. Bush, and neuters people like Mr. Bush.
It concerns me. I believe in free speech whole heartedly, but how do we apply the freedoms to make a stronger nation? Give me some ideas here. The theoretical isn't translating into the practical.