First, No, for the following reasons:
1. The US was the originator of heavier-than-air powered flight, and thus the first-adopter and standard setter as well as the hub for much of the innovation in aviation. This lead to the early adoption of airlines and related entrepreneurship and the rapid build-out of airfields and related infrastructure. After WWI and again after WWII the US got the benefit of all those returning trained and experienced pilots... lots of stuff contributed to Americans adopting air travel. The US economy has also been heavily geared to productivity and the best use of man-hours, which lead to the highest-valued things (people) moving on the fastest means (air). The phrase "Time is money" applies here.
2. World War II and the post-war years saw the US move people to the skies and cargo to the rails. At the start of WWII and during the war, Americans who traveled by commercial means generally did so by train (unless they were rich). American soldiers often started their adventure on a train ride from small town America to boot camp, then took trains to a port city, and a ship to Europe or Asia. By the Korean War, they did so by plane. The American people themselves chose to fly for civilian trips and stop using passenger rail service except on short-haul runs within several metropolitan areas - so the rails were largely left to freight haulers, who did what American industry loves to do: optimize. The US rail system is now the most efficient on the planet - for moving FREIGHT. As a result, the US freight trains and operators have priority on the rails.
3. People in other countries may have much longer vacations, typical Americans use air travel to optimize their time-off. If you have two weeks off per year, you do not want to burn any of that time unnecessarily on the travel, unless the travel itself is what you want (like a train ride through the Rockies). American companies also do not like to waste employee hours on travel or burn money on travel, so when they send somebody somewhere it's going to be by plane rather than the slower AND more expensive Amtrak. It's Time Management, and planes always win that one.
4. Congress gave Amtrak, a quasi-government entity, control over all passenger rail travel. Their routes are sparse, their schedules are a joke, their prices are higher than the price for flying, their trips take too long (often multiple DAYS) so you need to eat their food on board (which is insanely expensive) and many of their routes are incomplete and deceptive (you'll need to get off the train at some point, board a Greyhound bus for several hours, then get onto a different train to resume the trip (in other words: you're NOT going to get a good sleep on that leg of the trip with that sleeper ticket you bought...) People HATE this type of bait-and-switch, and with ZERO competition even allowed, Amtrak has never had ANY incentive to up their game and make American rail passenger service anything but a novelty other than in the "Acela corridor" (the all-important Washington DC to New York City routes used by media people and politicians who Amtrak must keep happy).
5. America is criss-crossed with rails built in the era of the steam locomotive. Nobody is willing to spend the money to convert all that to rails that can handle true high speed trains. There are also too many crossings and the right-of-way in many places is too narrow for either an upgrade, or adding new parallel rails. Where the rails are no longer being used for freight, they're generally abandoned, rather than upgraded.
6. There are two separate programs in the US currently operating supersonic test aircraft that generate reduced sonic booms. Both projects aim to enable supersonic airliners. In the referenced article, CNN even admits that plane travel is 1/3 the time of high speed rail, but that gap will INCREASE (favoring planes even more in the American mind) with supersonic airliners if they're finally allowed to operate over CONUS, which appears likely.
7. Americans move their families for career reasons and such more frequently than people in many other countries along with economic shifts partially affected by the differences between various states as politics change taxes and regulations in states relative to each other etc. As a result, travel patterns shift more rapidly than in some other nations. With air travel as the primary people mover, this is easily and cheaply handled (only the planes and airports are affected). With trains, one needs to deal with thousands of miles of rails and rights of way issues to add/move routes.
Now for the exception:
The ONE way for rail to beat air travel, and it certainly COULD if the people invested in legacy rail would get out of the way (or change completely) would be to move to low-pressure or vacuum-tube trains. This could be stuff like Musk's Hyperloops or the older notion of trains in tunnels pumped free of air. In these scenarios, all the advantages of trains beat planes, AND the trains could even go at supersonic (or even hypersonic, which airliners will NEVER do for energy and thermal reasons) speeds with no (or reduced) friction/compression/drag/heating issues. In a tube at vacuum, a train could go far faster than anything but a space plane or a point-to-point Starship, AND there'd be no crossings or right-of-way or eminent domain problems, and no costs for the purchase of vast swaths of land etc. No animal strikes, no derailments, no intersections, no collisions, perfectly designed slopes and curves because the path is not owned by anybody else or used by anything else... the tunnels are a winner. A vacuum tube train underground from LA to NYC that could accelerate half way there and decelerate the second half of the trip with NO speed limit would be a short trip (do the math).