A cirrus pilot is no more guilty of being a push button pilot than any number of jet pilots.
The Bonanza was also labeled a DR Killer as well... Some people can make better decisions under pressure than others, total time is not a good indication of that.
I find that people who are very mechanically inclined and know systems like the back of their hands are most able to make good decisions in regards to situations where mechanical and or structural integrity has been affected. People who are pathetically weak on systems and how things work should not be making the decision to pull that handle. They always panic first and react on emotion rather than logic. Like the time I had a student flip out on me in a middle of a flight when I pulled the mixture all the way back. He acted like I was trying to kill him... No common sense...
*rolls eyes* TT isn't an indication of decision making? Well at some point the old pilot outlived the bold pilot didn't (s)he?
In my experience some of the most dangerous guys are the ones who are system nuts, but for different reasons. I think it's possible that a systems nut would make a better decision on when to pull the chute. I think it is more likely any average pilot, with average systems knowledge, who has been trained and continued his/her education afterwards is going to beat both of your examples above at decision making 90% of the time.
Instead of attacking I'm suppose to be educating so here goes.
The reason the Bonanza was a DR killer had to do with the V-tails coming off the back of the tail because pilots would overspeed the aircraft and pull up to slow down. After a number of add-ons, and later an STC, the problem was corrected structurally (if you've ever seen the cuffs). Bonanza's still went down after the tail was corrected. I don't know if the NTSB ever correlated time and experience but the another group sure has. Insurance companies have, for decades, required all owners to get time with a special instructor for the bonanza because of the types of pilots it attracts. I've heard mostly the 25 hour number thrown around, but that is only if you get signed off by him/her. If you want to fly it low time with no experience you can pay outrageous fee's. Low time, more money than brains, weekend warriors were the ones who were plowing these things in, with or without the "DR killer STC", and they will continue to. The only solution the insurance companies have found (unless you have +500 hours high performance complex) is an intense course with an insurance qualified instructor, who will pound emergency after emergency on you. That seems to be the only thing that helps these guys who buy more plane than they can handle. In time I feel insurance companies will require something similar on the Cirrus, if they haven't already. We will need a few more dead Cirrus pilots first, and we haven't slowed much finding them. If gas prices keep going up that'll help stagnate the numbers, because less of them will fly.
If you've ever sat through a sales presentation with a cirrus vendor, as I have more times than I wanted to, they focus a lot of their marketing around the casual idiot. It reminds me of the days Cessna used to call their first ever tricycle aircraft "the airplane you can drive into the sky!". They do their best to dumb everything down.
"Carbon fiber, just like on a Ferrari" (So its super fast, way too expensive and I'll crash it!)
"All glass, just like jets and you know how safe jets are" (The DC-9 has glass?)
"Parachute for your safety!" (Just like the airlines, the best safety records, they all have parachutes right?)
"This one even has some ice add-ons that will get you out of trouble if you get caught in a little ice" (Wow! it is certified right? No? Oh, thats weird.)
"Just imagine hoping out of your Mercedes and into this leather coated machine" (Ah, flying a plane is JUST LIKE driving a car! SWEET!)
By the way, the carbon fiber means its an electrical nightmare. For instance, the first incarnation of the Cirrus flap's would extend every time you transmitted on the radio. If the radio's worked.
Jets are safe, generally, because they are flown by well trained pilots.
The parachute has attracted idiots who think they can goof around in the air and the parachute will save them.
The ice addons were originally to be certified, but they couldn't pass certification because they couldn't remove the ice. It was too expensive to redesign the thing, so they left it on the plane as a cost saving measure. The result? Unscrupulous salespeople have roped people in by lying about it's safety features. Well that might be unfair, it is possible the sales people have no idea the system is a failure. So they are either liars, or uneducated.
Continual associations between car's and planes trying to make this thing sound like a toy is ridiculous. These planes are not toys.