40,000 people die in automotive crashes every year in America. There are many, many more collisions, reported and unreported, that involve some type of injury.
To put that in perspective, it's like a Boeing 737-Max crashing every single weekday of the year.
Two 737-Max crashes caused all off the airplane type to be grounded for safety reasons and at the time, many travelers swore off ever flying in a 737-Max.
Imagine the scenario: Every day, Monday through Friday, a 737-Max crashes, everyone dies, and we all just accept that as normal and carry on. Any efforts to reduce these deaths are questioned and written off as just another way for companies to make money.
Interesting suggestion but lets provided some context.
115 million cars on the road every day. That's at a minimum 115M people every day.
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/...unted 150,hitting American streets every day.
Conversely approx 2M people travel in the US by air ever day.
https://www.statista.com/chart/2459...e of 2.56,virtually identical to 2019 levels.