I absolutely wasn't saying I'm not immune to this- but let's face it, that was horrible pitch/power/stick/rudder that contributed to to both of those accidents. Someone with good pitch/power awareness not pitch up to 17 degrees nose up at FL350 in a transport jet.... ever. The exact scenario has played out on a DL or NW 330 in china, and there have been a few 767s that have iced over similarly. They just held the wings level and around 2.5 degrees of pitch and the plane just keeps on flying.
Asiana was just a mess... when it boils down to it, no one was flying the plane. He may have been a great pilot otherwise, but he was a bump on a log that day. And none of his team members backed him up, either.