The localities that do mostly have the same things in common however. The closer you are to the equator the less sense season adjustments make, since day lengths don't vary.
And also the east/west location within a time-zone makes a difference in perception. e.g. some western NSW people in Australia complain about "daylight savings" because in the winter they need to get up when it's pitch black. However, winter is the
unadjusted time so they have this backwards. Winter daytime-length hits 10 hours at that lattitude, so sunrise is 7am and sunset is 5pm. however, the west of the timezone is 1 hour behind so they get sunrise at 8am and sunset at 6pm. That's nothing to do with "daylight savings" which isn't even operational at that time of year. In fact if you want more sun in the
morning you want to do the exact opposite of daylight savings, which increases the daylight in the
evening.
https://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/daylight-saving-time-map.htmlNotice that Russia
didn't have daylight savings before, but recently reintroduced it, while countries closer to the equator that once had daylight saving have mostly abolished it. Also, Arizona and part of Mexico don't have it, but they represent the part of their timezone closer to the equator. In Australia, the northern states and Western Australia all abolished daylight savings, however only Western Australia (where the largest city is further south) brought it back again.
So basically there's a tension there where anywhere nearer the equator has pressure to get rid of daylight savings and anywhere far from the equator has pressure to bring it back. So in other words, this splits each timezone into three bands who are all incentivized to have different synchronizations throughout the year. Northern Time, Equatorial Time and Southern Time.