Hang on, these aren't example of moral frameworks. I think most people would say that a war of conquest for land and resources are generally immoral. Ultimately though geopolitical pressures are those of self-preservation in the long run so I'm not sure life, even in a more removed sense, isn't at the top. But if you're talking about human ambition and power, no, those don't trump life. I know of no modern moral code where they do. Plenty of ancient ones, though.
Criminal execution I think you have backwards. This view is not that there is some good above life, but that the chief good (life) of the criminals has been ceded through their actions. In the modern legal sense, only murder carries the death penalty. In this case, and even in older cases (such as rape) life is again the matter in question - not retribution, but the guarantee that no further lives will be lost.
Your driving one is a bad example. In the long run life expectancy is zero. That we live in order to live is hardly a case against life being the chief good in our moral framework.
Spring break in a pandemic is a question of wisdom, not morality.
I am not arguing that life is at the top of any individual's values hierarchy. Many people are selfish and put their own needs above those of others, even to the point of murder. But that's what this thread is about, isn't it?
One case you didn't make is that of castle doctrine, the right to kill someone to defend property. But even then, buried, you'll find Locke's argument that an assault on property is an assault on liberty, and ultimately life. To wit: "This makes it Lawful for a Man to Kill a Thief, who has not in the least hurt him, nor declared any design upon his life, any farther then by the use of Force, so to get him in his Power, as to take away his Money, or what he pleases from him.: because using force, where he has no Right, to get me into his Power, let his pretense be what it will, I have no reason to purpose that he, who would take away my Liberty, would not when he had me in his Power, take away every thing else. And therefore it is Lawful for me to treat him, as one who has put himself into a State of War with me, I.e. kill him if I can; for to that hazard does he justly expose himself, whoever introduces a State of War, and is Aggressor in it."