Don’t reckon it helped any. Guess we’ll just have to agree to disagree.
Aviation accidents are rarely traced to a single causal factor, and most of them have some kind of contributing human factors (I can't think of any accidents off the top of my head that don't have causal human factors, be they aircrew, MX, ATC or management)
That is why in investigations they call it the accident chain, several factors linked which together lead to an accident/incident, and if any link in that chain is broken then the accident/incident is averted.
It is obvious in this case that the failure in the MCAS system was one of those links, but it is also painfully obvious that there are human factor links as well. (training, culture, philosophy, etc)
I'm not a commercial pilot, I am an A&P mechanic. So looking at it from my perspective I can say there is never, nor never will be a perfect airplane. Big airliners are so complex, with so many interconnected systems that something is always breaking/broken or inop. Engineers knew this and so designed aircraft with many levels of redundancy, but at some point something will fail that necessitates remedial action by the flight crew. Which is why crew training, as well as well written abnormal and emergency checklists are so important.
So, yeah. The failures of the aircraft systems didn't help, but it also seems like it should have been a problem easily overcome by a properly trained and competent crew.