It seems that well before Jezabel was tossed to the dogs in Jezreel, the Cannanites had something like a golden calf open pit barbecue going:
Dating to around 1800 BCE and still only partly excavated, the megastructure takes up a large section of Shimron’s already imposing tell, and therein may lie part of its purpose. While the glacis surrounding most of the site is covered with black basalt, the megastructure is covered by white chalk, which has the effect of making the already imposing feature stand out in the landscape, even from a great distance.
In addition to the monument’s potential political or symbolic significance, it also appears to have been a site of significant cultic activity. While excavating the structure, archaeologists stumbled across a large room that served as a favissa, a storage space for cultic and votive objects that had gone out of use. The over 700-square-foot favissa was originally unroofed, with thick mudbrick walls and two staircases, one leading into the room and another leading into the megastructure. Not long after it was built, the doors and staircases were blocked, making the favissa an open-air pit. Around that time, the pit became a dumping ground for religious ceremonies.
Excavating the favissa, the team at Tel Shimron discovered 40,000 animal bones, primarily from cattle, sheep, and goat. The bones showed signs of having been burned at extremely high temperatures, suggesting that they had been used for sacrificial rituals rather than meals. The team also found around 57,000 pottery fragments, including rare miniature jugs and bowls. Many of the fragments came from vessels that were typically used in temples instead of domestic contexts. Two bronze bull figurines—possibly representing the chief Canaanite deity El or the storm god Baal—were also discovered. source: https://www.biblicalarchaeology.org/daily/ancient-cultures/ancient-israel/megastructure-uncovered-at-tel-shimron/
While this is interesting from the standpoint of understanding how the Golden Calves become worshiped by Northern Israel within this region, there is an extra detail that makes it stand out further:
The favissa was uncovered only a short distance from another remarkable find, the earliest example of a corbelled vault ever discovered in the Levant. The corbelled vault had been discovered in an earlier excavation season before the team realized that the entire complex was part of a single megastructure. source: Ibid
So what this seems to be is a kind of burn pit along with a bank vault where maybe precious sacrifices were kept before being transported to the sacrificial enclosure as offerings? Shimron means watchtower or keeping guard, so perhaps the point was to guard against serving idols like the Canaanites did, and when Ahab and Jezebel fell in line with the worst form of that manner of idol worship in terms of serving as Biblical cautionary tales against how YHVH deals with bad behavior, Jezebel found herself eaten by dogs in the valley where before huge sacrificial pits to Golden Calves was made before her time by a people who were not Hebrew.
The Torah in this light, then, is meant to preserve life since it shows a person how to avoid her fate.