The "59" report is often exaggerated and the station providing that report to you might barely copy you. That's one reason for cutting a QSO short.
But don't say "I don't care where you're located," because precisely that information is where most real conversations start. If someone tells you they're 30 km outside Brussels, don't just let that pass...comment on it: "Oh, I love Brussels! The last time I was there, we..." <etc> and create a conversation based on data the other station provided.
Most of my "real" ham radio conversations start exactly like that. "Oh, you're in Bristol? Wow, I've been there six or seven times to visit the HP plant there. Drove all the way from Heathrow and it took me some time to get used to driving on the left side of the road, but I got the hang of it. What's the name of that little pub on Eskdale Road, down from HP?"
Before you know it, a real conversation starts. I don't leave it to the "other guy," I start it, myself.
WB2WIK/6