The fact that one of you sees PBS NewsHour as right-wing corporate propaganda, while the other sees it as left-wing commie propaganda, tells me it must be pretty bias-neutral.

How about this: PBS NewsHour is often shallow. Both the corporate right wing and the commie left wing prefer shallowness. A true reckoning of our world, the real news as compared to the predigested glosses, would radically undermine the whole spectrum of truisms, right to left and top to bottom. The whole game of "here's a fragment of fact, and here are two commentators from right and left to play the game of fitting it into their traditional molds" would be over.

Did anyone see Krugman laughing at the fools who believe oil prices are due to "speculators" earlier this week on Keith Olberman? It was delightful precisely because a show or two before Olberman had ranted at length about Enron redux, and mocked all who could doubt that it's all up to speculation. Naturally, Olberman was too chickenshit to invite Krugman to straighten him out, and just let the challenge drop. But as Krugman points out in his column today, there are as many elected Republicans and Democrats on the idiots' bandwagon on this one.

Somehow our brilliant capitalist system has never bothered to educated either politicians nor newscasters about the fundamentals of its essential institutions - such as the exchanges which pretty much define what our economic system is. You'd think businesses would hold summer camps to provide remedial education - except the businesses welcome the shallowness too.

Our brilliant capitalist system has never bothered to educate either politicians or newscasters about the fundamentals of its essential institutions

I doubt that any one person knows how the whole of our system operates.

On the other hand, I'm pretty sure that no one wants to admit they don't know it all.

We're all too vain to admit there is something we don't understand --so vain that we won't admit it even secretly to ourselves.

Do you know how a simple pencil is made?
Milton Friedman (famous economist) used to brag that one of the advantageous "features" of our capitalist system is that no one person knows how to make a complete pencil and yet it gets made.

Well, I think Friedman's description was more complicated than that, and probably not really a good example. Many people know how to make pencils, although they might not know every detail of everything.

Still, to know, one really only need read Henry Petroski's delightful book:
The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance

Petroski is a fine writer of many engineering books, in this case, detailing the history and manufacture of a simple-seeming item we take for granted.

I doubt that any one person knows how the whole of our system operates.

Indeed, that is an advantage, and why the capitalist system is "successful". Distributed or network decision making allows more complexity than could be directed by a smaller group of individuals. I am just reading a book on the history of the Industrial Revolution, and the breakdown of the rigid hierarchy of guilds after the middles ages is what laid the foundation for the Industrial Revolution.

Network systems tend to have emergent properties which are hard to predict, unlike hierarchical systems where those in charge can dictate the shape of events. While some of these unexpected properties are beneficial, some will not be, and will then be hard to "fix" because there is no single point where the decisions are made.

Politicians are really now just observers of the system, but give the illusion that someone is "in control". It's a bit like the illusion that your consciousness controls the actions of your mind.