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I guess that is a rhetorical question? The obvious thing to do would be sending a water sample to a lab and get it tested for lead, which is much cheaper than replacing all lead pipes based on just a suspicion. If you got old lead pipes and the test comes back negative you know for sure that all surfaces are covered in calcium carbonate.
Only if the water in fact has lead in it, which often is not the case with old pipes, as I explained.
In Netherlands you can send in water to test for lead at https://www.loodinwatertesten.nl/
And what happens when an uninformed homeowner does a quicky repair themselves? Swap a coupling or maybe get a new faucet and disturb the calcium carbonate?
With full recognition that not everyone can afford the swap, if you can do so, you should for the safety of everyone that enters the home and uses the water.
Sure, why not.
Downvotes for agreeing? 🤦