The Lion Air and Ethiopian MAX crashes were initially simply box stock AOA malfunctions that the crews failed to handle correctly.
There are many things involved here that may not be obvious to people in other industries.
For example, MCAS does not work with the flaps extended. So you retract the flaps and the aircraft pitches down and (for whatever reason) you don't understand that pitch down. What to do? Simple...the problem occurred when the flaps were retracted so just immediately "undo" what you did. Put the flaps back out. This kind of stuff is basic airmanship and should be intuitive. If the Ethiopian crew had just done THAT...no MCAS problem. They did a lot of other things wrong, starting with failing to react correctly to an AOA problem but that's just one example.
However, I realize all you folks in other industries that have never spent any time working in a transport category aircraft cockpit probably have a better understanding of what goes into being a trained and experienced ATP rated airman than people that have actually been ATP rated airmen for tens of thousands of hours and have actually trained other ATP rated airmen.
Busher: I'm with ya buddy!