Here is exactly what is going to lead us down a road to more regulation. This whole notion that your drone is just a toy and doesn't need any regulation at all, is why it scares the bejesus out of the FAA and the aviation community in general. If your drone weighs less than half a pound and you can only fly it up to 100 feet away from you in all directions then it is a toy. But when it weighs half a pound or better and has the capability of flying 4 miles away and several thousand feet high, then it is no longer a toy, it is an aircraft that definitely can have an affect on other aircraft in the NAS. The big difference in this whole scenario is I (and those others on here that think similarly) understand the gravity of what affect our UAS can have on other aircraft. We take it seriously and we try to do everything we can to enhance our situational awareness to the extent that it may seem like overkill to some. Where as those on here that think they are just playing with a toy don't think twice about stepping out anywhere, flipping on a few buttons, and tossing their toy into the wild blue yonder and anyone who criticizes them for doing that is just infringing on their personal right to do anything they please and thinks everyone that is not doing the same is just a wanta be something that they aren't. Right now I just fly for fun, but eventually I am going to find something I am interested in doing that turns my fun into a money maker and to do that you have to treat everything like it is something more than a toy and just going out to fly around your back yard.
I agree with you 1,000,000 percent. You nailed it on the head. Well said.