In Finland, all politics is data-driven. As in, if statistics or gathered data shows that a political decision was less than desirable, the data gathering will be immediately stopped and statistics un-gathered. If a third party later shows that the decision was less than desirable, it is straightforward and effective to claim that "nobody could have predicted this", because those who did predict it, had been labeled "conspiracy theorists" and "foil hatters" already.
The most free news in the world, indeed: we're just the best closing our eyes from observable facts.
This is to say, human idiocy is infinite, and rational and logical thought requires effort. Even when a logical, rational, proven better options exist, it is usually still an uphill battle to try and change the inertia of past decisions and established social "norms": this is what it is to be human.
I do find it interesting (and somewhat disconcerting) how many of the "best" software projects are driven by benevolent dictators, instead of any kind of democratic processes. There are enough important counterexamples (C, Debian, Apache) that I don't think it is anything inherent, but more a combination of issues we haven't dealt with yet.
Considering all that, I'm not sure how I feel about "Python becoming the most popular language". There is something definitely sinister in that to me, even though I write Python code very often; if not daily, nearly so anyway.