And please don't assume that I don't know anything about microbiology. I'm not saying you don't understand the process, but I do think you (briefly, and certainly accidentally) confused the function and respective byproducts of the two critters in your earlier response.
You keep saying that the yeast is responsible for producing the acids in the bread. That's not the case. You also said in your original post that fermentation should be kept anaerobic: "If the yeasts have access to oxygen, they'll just continue the process and produce acetic acid, the "sour" in your sourdough starter."
But yeast DO need oxygen: "Unlike bacteria,
there are no known yeast species that grow only anaerobically (obligate anaerobes). Yeasts grow best in a neutral or slightly acidic pH environment." Quoting this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeast (take your pick from the bibliography at the end RE sources).
You never brought up baking yeast v. sourdough culture until this post, so I have no idea why you mention it now; we haven't been discussing anything about baking yeast, or how it differs from a sourdough culture.
You also said: "Any bacteria are inhibited by either alcohol or acetic acid." Not entirely; the lactobacillus in sourdough culture tolerates a certain amount of alcohol produced by the yeast, and the yeast in turn tolerates--and in fact flourishes in--a certain amount of acid produced by the bacteria. It's that balanced, symbiotic relationship that makes for a good sourdough.
You seem bent on picking on my original response to you, and I have no idea why. Nothing I said was incorrect. You suggested that I don't have my starter in an appropriate container, and I'm saying I do, and explained why (and it certainly flourished for a couple of years in that container the last time I regularly baked sourdough).