No sir, These are contributing factors. The root cause is further back in the chain. There are features and decisions around MCAS that are likely to be the true root causes.
- Was there a culture problem at Boeing?
- Were they desperate to compete against the Airbus offering?
- Did they in fact conceal information from or deliberately seek to misinform the FAA?
- Why was MCAS not properly explained to airlines and pilots?
I do not think it is right to lay all the blame at the feet of the pilots or airlines when the machine itself was flawed. If it had not been for MCAS neither of those brand new planes would have crashed.
Maybe you could share with us your extensive experience in the cockpit of jet aircraft.
I do admire your journalistic capabilities though. You managed to phrase each of your questions like an accusation.
When grossly inexperienced pilots are dispatched in jet aircraft and an abnormal event occurs (and yes I said abnormal-not emergency, because a stab runaway is a non-event for experienced well trained pilots), the results can be biblical. I will also add that the Ethiopian jet should not have been dispatched. It had clearly been faulted for intermittent Air Data Computer failures which ultimately caused the MCAS to intervene when no intervention was needed. Experienced pilots would know that and would have declined to fly the airplane until the fault was rectified.
If I can find fault with Boeing, I could only say that they should not have given the MCAS such force that it could not easily be overridden by average pilot strength which would give the pilots as much time as they needed to disable the stab trim and manually correct the mis-trim situation.