I'm loving the adult conversation we are having now.
To answer your question I pose a rhetorical. What is the stall speed of your aircraft with full flaps at 45 and 60 deg of bank. Quick , don't look in a book.
Second, airspeed is in the dash. AoA is on the dash in field of view. There is an aural warning if you get to slow before you hear the stall horn.
Third, sure we are not flying high performance fighters. But, AoA is independent of weight, or any other condition. It's precisely telling you where you are in the lift curve.
Thus airspeed settings (white arc, red arc) are for 1g. I've seen in turbulence at 130 knots the indicator turn yellow.
Again it's telling you if there is imminent threat to loss of control.
So let's address the Asiana. And for that matter Air France 447 and finally Sully.
If the Asiana pilot had AoA (not stall stick shaker when it was too late) and an aural warning if "too slow" he may have had a different outcome.
In the Air France they clearly had lot of airspeed and altitude. Yet the pilot was pulling up (great documentary on YouTube ) and again had he been trained using AoA (like the military) he would know get the nose down no matter what the airspeed says. (He was near red line)
Finally good ol Sully. Trained using AoA. And the US Air fleet had AoA on board ! It's actually a green donut on the airspeed indicator. This bought him time to make a decision. Bravo!
Remember private pilot 101. An aircraft can stall at any speed. But always the same critical angle of Attack.