Using public transport for a relatively long traject inside the same city, if you turn off the pilot mode, you'd see things, notice and learn so much about life.
Today, I noticed how different we people are, even though we're sharing one small planet. Moving from one place to another with no more than one-mile distance between them, I could see how different people are. They act differently, talk differently and look differently.
People step in, others step out, and you feel like traveling from one planet to the other.
I had to adapt to a new environment every while. One minute I'm a nice guy, looking relieved and relaxed, the next minute I'm a threat, or at least I'm someone nobody wants to mess with.
Or maybe we're all the same but people are just changing like me, adapting to the environment. In that case, if none of us is the threat, what makes us feel that way?
Places are ranked—or shamed—based on what we humans did on them. Sometimes a crime happens somewhere. The criminal who did it could escape, but the place would be haunted forever (The opposite is also true). It would always be referred to as "this is where so and so happened". Is it fair?