Agree. I like Go for the same reason. With Java, there's a weird pressure to spend a week designing class hierarchies and to set up all the factories and abstract factories. In Go - uh, you can do it, but you're going against the grain.
I have been writing Java for 4.5 years and have never felt such pressure. In fact, I have never written a factory and use inheritance sparingly. The problem of Java is the culture of the enterprise bros who worship at the altar of the Holy OOP, not the language itself.