I think at heart most folks have a village type mentality. That means connection with others, either as Tengu and I live, countryside on the doorstep but a five minute walk to the post office and the corner shop
or as British Red does, five minute walk from his neighbour
Cities breed a peculiar kind of 'ignore the other' mindset since it is physically impossible to acknowledge every single person one meets. Villages don't work that way; to not acknowledge someone is an offence. Even if it's just an nod or an "aye", as we pass by.
Civilization was really just the behaviour of people who had to learn to live in very close quarters in the urbs. 'Manners' grew out of the fashions of acceptable behaviour.
Courtesy, originally the behaviour associated with the acceptable respects of the court, is really an appreciation and regard for others, respect without losing ones own, not a selfish or hide bound set of behaviours. Icy British politeness can actually be very cutting, while courtesy is a quiet smile that everybody feels.
I suspect the biggest difference UK/USA is the way that driving is used to shorten the distances. Basically the mentality is the same but in the USA they remove the distance objections by using fossil fuels. The British aim in the same situation is to be self sufficient enough that there is rarely need to travel the distance.......though if petrol were £2 a gallon here, maybe we might
My grandparents and parents walked to school, I walked to school, my children walked to school, but many of the children of their friends are driven the mile and a bit to school.
People don't want to spend the time walking for trivial things now it seems, it's about quality time for walking, or children, or entertainment.
There is no real appreciation of time to move at a natural pace in the frantic race to get to work, to get to the shops, to get to the nights out, to get on holiday.
I work from one end of the country to the other, and I'm glad I've had the opportunity, but I am conscious that the fuel burden that doing so consumes, is not doing our environment, or indeed our international political long term peace, any favours.
But that's a discussion for round the campfire
cheers,
Toddy