I'm a commercial drone operator, and literally everything in the parent post is how we already operate. It's not even a little bit burdensome, and it lets sUAS operators fly safely with our crewed counterparts.
You're either very confused or straight out lying.
No, I'm pretty sure I'm still on point.
I fly a RC aircraft at a small RC airfield in a rural area which is around 10 miles from the nearest (small) airport. I fly a homebuilt RC aircraft that cost me $400 total (including the controller) and weighs roughly 2 pounds to a maximum altitude of around 300 ft. I only get to fly 10 times a year due to time constraints, and in fact, I didn't fly at all last year.
So nothing about these regulations would be especially onerous? You're flying in line of sight, you're flying under 400 feet, you're not flying in controlled airspace or at night...
Now we have the FAA pushing to RC planes like manned aircraft. Keep in mind a pilot's license currently costs $4-10k plus lots of training--to fly a toy in mostly unnavigable airspace.
Yes, we have a problem. There are drones operated near and in class B airspace, and they have caused issues and encounters with aircraft. Something must be done. But treating toy RC aircraft like planes is insane. Calling those laws "no burden" is wrong.
Yes, this is oppression. I should be able to play with toys without tons of training and paperwork in my own backyard. Except for near airports, the safety argument is crap. Last year in the US, 818 people died riding bikes. 110 died from lawnmowers. 51 died from lightning. How many people have died in the history of recreational RC aircraft? 3?
It's not tons of training and paperwork. The commercial exam is the aeronautical equivalent of the Technician ham radio license. You can do free practice tests online, and expect to pass the actual exam. I can't imagine a hobbyist license would be any more difficult.
Repealing 336 (as I'm reading it) would put everyone under the same restrictions as commercial sUAS operators. Now, the exam fee is kind of steep — it oughta be $15 for noncommercial, not $150 — but the rest of the operational flight requirements would affect basically nobody in this thread.
And yeah, if you're gonna fly, you oughta know the rules of the road. For a ham radio analogy: 2 meter handhelds, improperly used, probably won't kill anyone or disrupt much — but you still gotta get a license and know what you're doing.