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I'm quoting all of you, because you ALL bit off on the sidestick-vs-yoke, rather than the more important argument: "Why can both controls be moved in opposite directions?!"
The original post wasn't so much about the physical object you're holding, but rather the fact that whatever object it is can move in two different directions at once.
I'm no commercial pilot, my personal experience is fairly limited (SGS-232, SGS-233, Lark, Samba XXL, Cessna 172, Cessna 182, Cessna 206, T-6B, trivial time at the controls of a C-17 and CH-53E), but EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THESE AIRCRAFT had something in common: When one [insert control object here] moves, the other moves in the exact same direction, at the same rate. To my knowledge, it has been this way throughout history. And for a good reason. Airplanes are not inherently more dangerous than other objects, but they are IMMENSELY unforgiving. From experience, when things go wrong, they go wrong quickly, and you have ZERO time to discuss the matter. I've done everything from dodging birds and deer, to losing control surfaces, to hydraulics, and plenty of other issues among most of these aircraft, and I can count on one hand the number of times I've had time to do so much as say "oh $%#@!!!" before having to do something fairly drastic with the controls. Even in the T-6, er brief before every flight, "If you see something AND HAVE TIME, say it. If not, grab the controls, and muscle it over to avoid the situation. If you feel me jerk the controls away, let it go, I see something you don't, AND TALK ABOUT IT WHEN WE HAVE TIME." There are MANY situations where you don't have time to discuss what's happening, but in every other aircraft design, if someone sees something and slams the stick over, he doesn't have to say anything to the other pilot, that guy can FEEL that something is being done.