Oh look, a thread about a crash and
@Boris Badenov is blaming automation and touting the wonders of hand flying. I'm shocked. Shocked, I say!
This accident had absolutely nothing to do with a lack of hand flying skills, or an over reliance on automation. None of the regulators, the airlines, the unions, nor anyone else wants to say what the truth is, because there are just too many of these damned things out there now, so the cat is out of the bag. But the problem is Airbus flight control design philosophy. It's just flat out dangerous.
The cockpit is a scene of complete chaos in this accident. Not because of lack of experience. Not because of incompetence. Purely because of the circumstances. And in this state of chaos, you have two pilots with their hands on the controls, and neither is aware that the other is doing so. Both are pushing their idiotic "override" buttons, both are moving the stick in opposite directions, and neither is feeling so much as a tickle on the stick to let them know that the other guy is touching the controls. Even if the airplane was screaming "OVERRIDE" or something similar at them, they never would have noticed, because the cockpit is in a state of chaos. Various warnings are flashing, aural alarms are going off, and they're scared ----less. An annunciator light or aural warning telling you that the other guy has pushed his override button and is making control inputs is going to go completely unnoticed. So both of them keep pushing the button, and both of them keep making control inputs. It doesn't matter one damned bit how skilled you are in stall recovery techniques, it ain't going to end well.
It is absolutely unconscionable that there are thousands of airplanes flying around that don't have tactile feedback on both control inputs when a pilot moves the controls. It is absolutely unconscionable that we have airplanes flying around where the throttles don't move as thrust inputs change. It is absolutely unconscionable that we have airplanes flying around with different "laws" for different circumstances that make their flight controls respond differently. The only "laws" that the flights controls on an airplane should deal with are the laws of physics.
I'll get slammed for this post, and I don't care. Airbus design philosophy is dangerous and irresponsible. Ground the whole lot of them.