(on edit - which is true, some involve one fatality and no injuries, some kill whole families.)
The above: That is true. And it's true both for car crashes and for public policy. But it's a truth that has very different implications for car crashes than it does for public policy when it's in context and in reality. Because you don't have to think car crashes through to understand them, or know what part of them represents which of your values, or decide what to do about them. They're finite events that are more or less the right size for human comprehension to sustain without becoming overtaxed and erratic in its functioning.
Whereas public policy has a conceptual dimension that will always take a lot of individual effort for anybody even to come close to perceiving clearly in the first place. And even more effort than that to keep in view over the long haul. And it's way too big for the equivalent outcome of one fatality and no injuries ever to be a minor or insignificant loss from a populist perspective. Even if that outcome is literally one fatality and no injuries. I mean, obviously, you win some and you lose some. But if your basic resting stance isn't a non-negotiable and global: "Absolute opposition to any and every specific increase in fatalities and injuries in one part of the polity as a consequence of actions by the state, even if it's in exchange for a reduction in fatalities and injuries in another part," you'll never even win
some.
I don't know. There's never too much fresh thinking, I guess. I mean, to me, state's rights just isn't the solution, even though, to me, the ill it seeks to address is very definitely the problem. (Basically: This country is much too fucking big for liberty and justice for all to be achievable at a federal level in the present, and it's never ever going to be again.)
Because the only really clear strength that state's rights have as a solution to that particular problem is that there's an extant precedent for them that's closer to a solution than anything else that happens to be already lying around conveniently close to hand. So they're clearly perceptible. And, you know, compared to the vast empty dark nothingness that's your only other option absent effortful fresh thinking, I can see how they might look good.
But we all, all deserve better than that, imo.
For one thing, it almost certainly can't really be autonomy, just out of the gate, when it's been part of the story power's been telling the people for the last 200 or so years. Because it's never that easy. Never has been. Never will be. We all, all have to work harder, I think or guess or hope.
Apart from which, I got no solution either. Of course.