There are people who are just "nervous livers." They live constantly afraid. Afraid of everything. Especially if it is new.
When handheld GPS units were a new thing most airlines would let you use them "at the captain's discretion." This meant asking an attendant to ask the captain if it was OK. It was never a problem with any of the flight crew, in fact one time my dad got a note from the cockpit asking if his GPS agreed with the one up front, and I've had attendants gather 'round and marvel at how well mine worked, even inside the metal tube.
One time I asked and there was a woman behind me (woman not being relevant, just trying to set the scene) who overheard my request. I'm guessing she was a nervous flyer, or worried about terrorists (this was in 2002), or just a nervous liver. She proceeded to loudly complain about me and how I was "taking up the pilot's time" and "what possible use could I have with a GPS," and I would crash the plane, etc. I tried to explain that there was no danger, just that the rules required me to ask first, but clearly she was not going to let this go. I got the attendant's attention and told her to forget about it. Just because this person was causing a scene.
Humans are very conservative creatures. Very few of us enjoy new things, the majority find comfort in consistency and routine. Any time there's a change to that routine many of us react badly. It is a byproduct of our past, when a rustling bush could be a gentle breeze or a mountain lion. And if that noisy bush is in a place you've never been to before, well, that's pretty scary. These nervous livers are living life
in the limbic brain, never getting out of that comfort zone. For me (and I imagine most drone enthusiasts) this is no way to live. But they do a useful service in that they seem to be quite happy to do all the mundane stuff we don't like.
Of course these days they seem to be taking over. There are a lot of them, and the media of all types seems to encourage switching off upper brain functions because it's easier to sell stuff and keep viewers by turning up the the lizard brain instead of an appeal to the intellect.
I'm not saying I'm immune to this thinking either. I've been there, like when walking down an unfamiliar street even though I'm 5' 11", in pretty good shape and usually carrying a multitool. Or hearing the wolves and coyotes howling just before I fall asleep in the tent. Or when I don't do that new thing I've wanted to try just because...