You list three that don't, and then you go on to list seven languages that do.
Yes, not many languages support concurrency like Go does...
So it's really Go vs. Java, or you can take a performance hit and use Erlang (valid choice for some tasks but not all), or take a chance on a novel paradigm/unsupported language.
That's 6 languages, a non-exhaustive list of them, that are either properly mainstream and more popular than Go or at least well-known and easy to obtain and get started with. All of which have concurrency baked in and well-supported (unlike, say, C).
EDIT: And one more thing, all but Elixir are older than Go, though Clojure only slightly. So prior art was there to learn from.