It’s still Italy. And for the record, when poor southern Italians residents get desperate enough, it’s logical to presume that they will venture out beyond that area to rob & kill. Which is why the fact that it’s still Italy stands.
Poor analogy. That's like comparing California and Kansas. Both America, but DRASTICALLY different economic structures, cultures, norms, industries and wealth.
Northern Italy is more industrialized, cosmopolitan and urbane. Lots of people working white collar jobs they can do from home, still earn money, closer to vital land trade routes etc. Lombardy and Piedmonte are some of the hardest hit areas and yet you are seeing social unrest in the south...why? Because below Rome/Lazio they are a much more agrarian society. Manual labor, farming, small cash only businesses, etc. shyt that you have to leave the house to do. And when the country is locked down guess who gets hit first and worse economically. Poor, low-skill, low-wage workers.
Now back to my analogy. You can't call civil unrest in California the same as it is in Kansas. LA Riots happened...you think KANSAS was affected? Hell, you think Las Vegas was affected? NOPE.
As
@itsyoung!! said, I don't know what the point is here. Its widely known how different southern Italy is from northern. Might as well be Coastal America vs Heartland America. Same country but you really can't conflate the two at all when it comes to social issues.