Developers were graduating with better and better knowledge of the systems we worked with. There was one of the big pushes in category theory that seems to happen every few years going on. The developers who _had_ graduated _years_ ago weren't leaving industry but they _were_ getting older. People were looking at concepts like pattern matching and fp.
Go was explicitly made for new graduates, but developers are only new graduates (if they are graduates at all) for a very short period of time 8/
So along comes go and in every respect it seems to be looking backwards, but not in the way that the industry rediscovers actors every ten years or so. It wasn't rediscovering the past, it was flat-out tacking that direction.
But. A language existed that was sometimes used for servers but was used for a _lot_ of utility scripts and applications and that a lot of people struggled with for large projects. Where there were already libraries for CSP but they were used but inconsistently. 9/