Vinterberg does specifically say in a interview I read that the Ugandans reference how we can watch hundreds of thousands starve on TV and yet remain emotionally removed.
However, he also talks in the interview about the world's jet set upper-class experience of flying - Belgrade to Vancouver in half a day, rootlessness, etc. I'm sure this is why the Ugandan says, "We're human, we don't want to fly": modern globalized culture (as epitomized by jet travel) is seen as "inhuman" in that it disinherits us of our roots, but everyone on the planet is being sucked up into it (pun sort of intended) whether they want to be or not. Maybe this is why John and Elena and their brothers are all Polish, yet have clearly not been there in a long while. (EDIT: This may not be true for John, now that I think about it.)
Yeah, with that everything lines up neatly: John's brother (Penn) used to be afraid to fly, but then overdosed on the anti-fear-of-flying drug and now he can't stop, to the point of hitching rides on cargo planes. Thus his (cellphone) connection to his brother fades and he's reduced to leaving messages, if he's getting through at all from his doomed, self-contained, miniature world.
It also explains the in-and-out accents: they're losing their individual identities in the global melting pot. Unintended perhaps, but it fits.
At least it's a LITTLE more subtle than "people dying of loneliness."
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