GA is pretty dangerous and I think it's disingenuous to pretend that it's safe.
It's also a fallacy to believe that because most accidents are attributed to pilot error, you're somehow immune to that (illusory superiority).
I don't believe I'm immune to pilot error. I do, however, very firmly believe that I can easily and naturally avoid the cause of a great many pilot-induced crashes.
I recently spent a couple of hours looking at NTSB reports involving fatal (and then non-fatal) accidents involving a specific model of aircraft I am pursuing, to see what most often kills pilots and destroys airplanes. I came away with a list of rules:
1.) Don't do stupid things and fly into trees, hills and buildings.
2.) Don't fly so low to the ground you can drag a wingtip and crash.
3.) Don't attempt aerobatic maneuvers (the plane is not approve for aerobatics, BTW) low to the ground.
4.) Don't leave the control locks in place when you take off.
5.) Don't try to fly somewhere with no fuel in the tank(s).
There were others that I could see happening with more "usual" levels of carelessness, but most of the clearly evident causes were the kind that leave you shaking your head and saying, "Well, yeah, of course that ended badly". Then there were a rash of "pilot skill didn't match requirements" kind of errors that bent airplanes, but seemed to pretty much never kill people. Loss of control on the ground, usually -- they're taildraggers.
So, no, I'm absolutely not immune to pilot error. I've made my share of mistakes already, but none have risen the the level of outright pilot- and passenger-killing stupidity. And I do believe that I
can avoid that kind of error.