so are you saying you prefer a society with absolutely no legislation on society? including those manufacturers that have to comply with, whatever products they make?
I would prefer a society involving (comparatively) very few laws and regulations.
Your post is not particularly clear so I will answer both possible interpretations:
1. Do I think that manufacturers should be required to produce products which have safety features (seatbelts)? Or similarly are made from safe materials (asbestos)?
No I do not. If people want the features then manufacturers will make them, there is no need to legislate to bring this about.
2. Do I think that if a manufacturer produces a product (of their own free will) that has a safety feature of some sort (seatbelts) that aforementioned safety feature should comply with some standards?
Yes I do. But this is not particularly an area for legislation. Any product should do what it says on the box. Contract law covers this and on top of which we have the Trade Practices Act, probably could be streamlined but not high on my list of government interventions to roll back.
If you care for some examples of this in practice then look no further than your computer. No government legislates the hundreds of technical standards which it complies with and yet it works. When you buy a usb cable it works because manufacturers agreed on a standard, not because government created one.