Sorry, but I dont agree.
I feel extremely safe handling a jigsaw. My tablesaw? Not so. I respect that beast, and even then... Ive had some close calls. Pieces getting caught up, and flying across the room at mach 5. Some pieces slamming into my gut, like getting hit with a sledge hammer.
In shop class, we were hearing all kinds of gruesome stories. One was about a 1" deep bandsaw blade that snapped and flew out of the machine. Not good!
Drilling a hole, on your lap, is just pure idiocy and shows absolute lack of thought, common sense, and awareness. Its called table and clamps.
If your drill wrenched out of your hands, you can let it go. The drill cord might rip, but thats way better than if the drill simply would not stop. For example, a drill press where material broke free of the clamp, spins at warp speed, smashing into the base, and pieces flying all over the room at high velocity.
Most power tools have a safe system where you Must hold down a button to keep the tool active, And even when you lock it down, its pretty easy to just let go and still be safe. They are less powerful, and work at lower speeds.
High speed tools are the most dangerous. A jigsaw is infinitely more safe than a circular saw or bandsaw. And a reciprocating motion is much easier to escape than a linear one. Pieces dont fly across the room when using a jigsaw, even when binding up. It cant suck you down into the mechanism. Nor catch or rip off a digit in the blink of an eye.
Funny enough, I thought a circular saw was the scariest tool to operate... but after a bunch of cuts, it was nothing compared to the stuff thats happened with the tablesaw. So long as you dont try to operate your circular saw like a tablesaw, its pretty safe.
The scariest 'hand' tool that Ive used to date is a router. I feel its much more dangerous, and way easier to lose control of, than something like a circular saw.