Just curious... What about a 1911 do you not trust, or feel uncomfortable with?
The design is such that when sitting in the holster it is exceedingly safe. However, consider the following; the grip safety is deactivated when you grip the handle, before you have started to draw it. The thumb safety is specifically designed to be deactivated quickly, even as a consequence of drawing. Therefore, the gun goes from "exceedingly safe" to a very fireable state often before the gun clears the holster. To cap it, many of the nicer 1911s have a trigger pull that is shorter, lighter and crisper than my Buckmark 22 (and that's a crisp, short trigger); only 100% strict, unwaverable adherence to rule 3 (keep your booger hooker off the bang switch) prevents an ND. A DA/SA on the other hand allows carry hammer-down, giving the trigger a much harder pull. My current carry weapon can be pulled out by the trigger and it will not fire. Couple that with a decocking safety that, when on, basically locks the firing pin where it can neither be contacted by the hammer nor move past the block, and hammmer down, safety on is only slightly less safe a carry mode than unchambered, just as fast to ready as a 1911, and only slightly slower, only on the first trigger pull. Slam dunk.
Now, it is impossible to actually pull my gun out of its holster by the trigger; I know drawing by the trigger, if possible, is a flagrant disregard for Rule 3; and I know safeties are no substitute for the four rules. I still prefer a DA trigger to a 3lb, 1/16", "bang switch" in the literal sense, kept locked by a latch that takes no more effort to disengage. Keep in mind I bought my first firearm about 3 months ago, so I'm still getting used to the idea of a deadly weapon on my hip. I also have firsthand experience that a loaded hammer-down TDA is only as safe as the handler, just like any other gun, and if I had a 1911 and wore it around on a daily basis like the guys at the gun shop I'd probably be over my discomfort in short order. It's just me.