So you want to go back to the unregulated early days of aviation? Really?? Sure, the regulations are getting a bit onerous, but the discarding of them all would kill an awful lot of people. From a Wiki article on the history of aviation safety:
In 1926 and 1927, there were a total of 24 fatal commercial airline crashes, a further 16 in 1928, and 51 in 1929 (killing 61 people), which remains the worst year on record at an accident rate of about 1 for every 1,000,000 miles (1,600,000 km) flown. Based on the current numbers flying, this would equate to 7,000 fatal incidents per year.
For the ten-year period 2002 to 2011, 0.6 fatal accidents happened per one million flights globally, 0.4 per million hours flown, 22.0 fatalities per one million flights or 12.7 per million hours flown.....
.....During the 1920s, the first laws were passed in the United States of America to regulate civil aviation, notably the Air Commerce Act of 1926, which required pilots and aircraft to be examined and licensed, for accidents to be properly investigated, and for the establishment of safety rules and navigation aids; under the Aeronautics Branch of the United States Department of Commerce (US DoC).
After WW1, you could buy war-surplus aircraft cheaply, notably trainers, and fly without a license or any formal training. Lots of dead people resulted. The airplanes were not properly maintained and regularly failed in flight. With so many accidents, public outcry forced the government to start regulating it. Pilots had to have training and be licensed. Airplanes had to be inspected regularly and maintained to published minima. The accident rate fell sharply, flying became more popular, and many companies were formed to build and sell light airplanes. Most didn't survive---there were too many of them, and the depression of the 1930s made money hard to come by---but the airplanes were stout and much safer than they had been a few years previously. Rules of the air kept the midair crashes to a minimum, pilot understanding of basic aerodynamics such as angle of attack reduced the stupid loss-of-control crashes, and so on.
Ignorance of all this just feeds the tear-it-all-down philosophy so popular these days. But believe me, if you get what you're demanding, you'll wish you had never asked for it. No laws make you fair game for the predators that are out there.
Do you even have a pilot license?
America already has the most permissive aviation culture in the world. Some countries forbid private flying, and in many others it's really expensive, and in some it's the extremely strict regulations doing it. America could get like that if enough scofflaws start doing their own thing. Some of the population already resent "rich" pilots and aircraft owners, and they'd happily demand the grounding of private aircraft.