@amarazii Thank you for liking my comment. I think it would be good if there was an atmosphere in the city where strangers could interact with each other. The lack of this in cities is not because "city people are cold", but because we don't know each other and are wary of each other. In Japan, if a stranger suddenly talks to me, I am wary, thinking "Does this person want to sell me something or recruit me for a religion?" On the other hand, in the countryside, people are more friendly, but only if we know each other, and they are still "cold to strangers". It's sad that the idea of "being cold to strangers" is pre-programmed into the brain of all humans.
I think the scope of the word "we" is different in the countryside and in the city. In the countryside, it's due to local ties. In the city, it's more abstract. For example, we work in the same place, we have the same religion, etc.
Many people live in cities, but I feel that we need a design (urban planning, administration) that allows us to call each other "we" even in the city.