Not sure it applies here but I agree with you generally...Ninja Hands have caused more problems than they've ever fixed.
Kinda think it does apply quite aptly here.
Seems the pilots were both heads down when the "event"/"anomaly"/"charlie foxtrot" commenced. So that right there is going to make this situation very tough. When the PF looked up he saw something that was completely unexpected and uninitiated by any pilot action. And, it seems, he took immediate action based solely on that something. But that "something" was incorrect data on one display unit. Other display units apparently were indicating correct data (i.e. information). Still other, independent indications remained unchanged from their state previous to the pilots taking their eyes away from the gauges (airspeed, altitude, engine settings, etc.) When airspeed, altitude, and engine haven't changed, chances are EXTREMELY good that nothing else materially has changed.
Easy to say from my calm, comfy desk, but before reacting, assess the situation and the quickly determinable consequences. Before any experiment, you need to establish your controls, lest you inject a hot dose of independent variables into the equation. In this particular case, it looks like the plane was flying along just fine - albeit with a FUBAR primary display; unfortunately, the PF reactively pushed the plane out of steady state based not on the state of the plane, but on the state of a faulty display. Had he waited just moments to separate the information from the data, things might have been very different. Once again, that's easy to say from a disinterested perspective, not so easy when one looks back up at a BIG, panel-dominating attitude indicating screen and it's telling you something is woefully amiss.
That is one thing I don't like about the new tech; certain data is amplified over other data and becomes virtually un-ignorable due only to the sheer size of the screen presenting it.
At the end of the day, I always remember the words of my dad years ago when he was teaching me to drive. "Son," he said, "Most accidents happen not because people don't react when they should, but rather because they overreact when they shouldn't."