It happened with Next.js as well https://github.com/vercel/next.js/discussions/11106
> Say Python ran in the browser natively, and you reimplented React on browser and server in Python. Same problem, not Javascript.
Yes.
And since Python does not natively run in the browser, that mistake never happens. With JavaScript, the desire to have "backend and frontend in a single codebase" requires active resistance.
It's the same vulnerabilities because Next uses the vulnerable parts of React.
Your rational is quite poor as I can write an isomorphic web app in C or Rust or Go and run parts in the browser, what then? Look, many of us also strongly dislike JavaScript but generally that distaste is based on its actual shortcomings and failures, you don't have to invent new ones plenty already exist.
If you have a single codebase for Go-based code running in an untrusted browser (the "toilet") and a trusted backend (the "kitchen"), then the same contamination is highly likely.