I will gladly fly any Beech, Cessna, Cirrus, Diamond, Fairchild, Aeronca, American Champion, Piper, Rockwell, Bellanca, Flight Design, Grumman, Jabiru, Lancair, etc
You see Tupac, this is where you go wrong. From the mechanics viewpoint that I have, I can tell you that there are some 1960 172s I wouldn't hesitate to fly, and other 1960 172s I wouldn't dream of flying in. You know this... it's all about how well maintained they are.
The same thing holds true with the big boys on the commercial side. There are some CRJs operated by carrier "A" I fly in all the time. However there is another carrier "B" which also operates CRJs and I don't think I'd ever fly with them because I've seen firsthand how sloppy their maintenance/repair work is.
In almost every case of catastrophic failure caused by mechanical or structural failure, it is not the fault of the design, or original manufacture of the aircraft. It is almost always a maintenance issue. The biggest one in my mind is the Alaska Air MD-80 that augered into the pacific because they decided lubing the HS jackscrew was to time consuming and they only did it 1/3 as often as the manufacturer recommended. Does that mean MD-80s are unsafe??? It wasn't MDs fault, it was the fault of Alaska Air's poor maintenance program.
There isn't a single commercially operated plane out there that I think is an unsafe design, but there are probably a few unsafe planes. It all comes down to maintenance, and in this case Airbus, EASA, and the FAA seem to be on it.