And so I think the same needs to happen here. Of course, if you ban anti-social media and promote prosocial media, that’s very good. In Taiwan’s classrooms, most classrooms now ban the use of small touch screens, but each student will have a “one laptop per child” policy so that they have large tablets, large laptops. They see screens as something that they can share with other people to build relational health and civic muscle, instead of isolating oneself. So, I’m not saying that banning is the complete solution. It may be one part of the solution, but it always works best if you can provide a healthier alternative in the same place.