Eddie:
Yes, as usual, you are right. It's not that hard, particularly if that's what you learned *first* and used it for some time. Just like it's easy and second nature in SF to just hold the clutch with your left foot, the brake with your right foot and slowly release the clutch, then the brake while at the same time using your right foot heel to tap the accelerator when you are stopped and about to move going up a steep hill. Some people consider using the handbrake in that situation "cheating" but I gather it depends on when you learned how to drive and who was the officer during your driving test.
Or, when I learned how to drive, you had to stop with the tires in a certain direction if you were parked uphill or downhill in SF.
But I can assure you, just like modern cars benefit from the tires in a certain direction when parked uphill or downhill, but it's not absolutely necessary anymore, once you drive for years with switches around the steering wheel, you will be annoyed with dash and floor switches, particularly during emergency maneuvers. It's not impossible, it's just a skill that's not taught anymore (just like many people do not know anymore how to set the distributor advance while driving, all cars do that for you now) and the times I've driven relatives' cars with manual transmissions and floor switches, I found them annoying. Luckily, I haven't had to downshift suddenly while blinking the high beams to alert people in front of me with those cars. When one is driving what we in America think of a "normal, modern" car, all we have to do is step on the brake, try to steer away from the trouble and blink the high beams, fast and easy. Not gonna list the lots of situations when having a manual transmission might be better or cheaper etc.
My point is that mostly now in my age I have a much higher appreciation for the absence of floor switches, and the amount of automation that driving is getting, including automatic transmissions, auto chokes, auto distributor advance, ABS, traction control, stability control, and even little things like intermittent wipers, rain sensors, cruise control and associated things (adaptive cruise control, automatic braking etc).
On of my brothers used to poke fun at those (he's younger than I am) -- he loves driving, he gets *miffed* when we go somewhere and he's not driving, he'll point out old cars didn't have those and people liked them etc. In fact, from the sounds of it, you'd think his dick would fall off if he couldn't drive a complicated car. He stopped poking fun one day when he drove one of the many 1940's cars one of my uncles had, he got sick pretty quickly of having to press the clutch, put the car in neutral, press the clutch again and change to the gear he wanted (no synchromesh on 1st or 2nd), not to say anything about having to crank the windshield wiper yourself. That's when he realized we *all* are used to some level of assistance from the cars, it's just what we grew up with is "normal" and the rest of the new stuff is for people who don't know how to drive properly.
Yeah, I can see that some people think that having all the "safety equipment" will save them from themselves and they can do all the wrong things -- I usually see them a few miles further down the road, in the middle of a ditch. Safety equipment does not relieve anyone from paying attention.
But the vast majority of cars leaving the assembly line this year will make it possible for people to brake the car and steer away from the problem, when 25 years ago that was not common and it was expensive, and a bit before then, you might not have been able to do it at all, skidding was a much more common situation back then.
I, for one, welcome all of that. Even self-driving cars.
Cheers,
-- Paulo.