from 40,000ft it's easy to see we do a terrible job watching our water - we're still in stone ages in terms applying tech in meaningful ways to mitigate and remediate disasters.
take it down to street level and think about Flint and consequences…one girl little asked a reporter if the bad drink she had will prevent her from ever growing up to be smart - and this is a developed country.
POTUS if you are listening and really want to solve healthcare, leave indelible mark on the world, and best of all own a unifying platform even your biggest enemies would need to endorse and support then put an initiative in place so the US becomes the leader in delivering better watercare eveywhere.
Some estimates say half the hospital beds in the world are filled with people who got some sort of waterborne illness. What happens to the cost side of the equation if we can the number of those incidents down 25-50%? What happens when the leaders of the left are asked whether or not they agree with on US taking leadership in water like you are already championing the US in space? What good is winning the space race if we can't reliably and economically manage water resources and water infrastructure. Who is going to answer JFK's call to action?