The pair of you are both seriously wrong, I'm fairly confident that there is little point but here goes...
Wyeast don't culture on molasse, no one in the brewing industry does (I also know someone who did a tour of their plant and they had pallet loads of DME).
We don't use simple sugars for very good reasons, Yeast is incredibly mutable, this is why anyone who propagates yeast commercially is always working up from single cells, feed yeast sugars for a couple of generations (that's about 2-3 hours/per) and there is a fair chance that it (or some of it) will "forget" how to handle anything else i.e. the more complex sugars in wort, which sort of negates the point of having lots of yeast.
Molasses is widely used in the ethanol and baking industry as a culture medium for yeast, but they want to have lots of yeast that is happy eating sugars.
Best answer is just to use LME/DME with nutrient for brewing yeast propagation.
If you understand and work with yeasts life cycle you can achieve the two main goals of yeast propagation easily and at very low cost. Sure having aeration and mag stirrers makes it easier and gives you better control but it isn't necessary.
The aim of yeast propagation is to have more of healthy yeast, its pretty easy to get this half right and have more yeast that really isn't in the right condition to ferment a wort, that has lots of mutations or lacks the stored energy reserves that make it ready to use, or able to finish off the job it starts i.e. throws lots of VDK, stalls, wont flock or goes too early....
If you cant supply enough Oxygen to keep the yeast toped up with sterols and glycogen, run the yeast through its full fermentation cycle (4-5 days) decant off the expended wort and start again with fresh well aerated wort. That way it will at least be healthy and ready to work.
One of the most damaging thing we can do to yeast is to try to get it to reproduce and starve it of oxygen, oxygen is a nutrient in terms of yeast propagation, yeast will try to reproduce and will expend its internal reserves, this just gets worse and worse with each generation. Biologically oxygen is generally highly available, yeast hasn't really got a mechanism to cope with limited availability, lots yes none yes some no! Putting yeast on a starvation diet isn't smart, better to grow it in steps.
Anyone thinking they can get enough dissolved oxygen (DO) into either a wort or starter by just shaking or splashing isn't really doing themselves any favours. Do a bit of reading up on how much DO you get from various aeration methods. There are very good reasons why 10ppm is recommended and you wont get even half that without proper aeration.
If you just work with yeast it will work for you.
If you want some good reading, PM your email address and I'll send you some good basic stuff (too big to post here).
Mark