Something has changed. I grew up in the 1970s and 1980s. Back then, there were societal and global problems. No doubt. Yet having witnessed the emergence of the Internet in the 1990s and the development of social media in subsequent decades, I feel that many of our current problems originate in digital spaces which we too often fail to make a healthy part of human life. This is not to say that the digital age should not be welcomed. The new opportunities are breathtaking and can certainly benefit our lives. However, the ways in which we interact, use language, and deal with topics have become an expression of the global crisis we currently experience. Everyone has to decide for oneself what it may mean to contribute to overcoming this situation. I work on a book in which I choose a highly controversial subject to demonstrate that we can have a reasonable and cultivated discussion even where the opposite usually takes place. What this subject is all about, remains to be seen.