> I mean, technically you could write your entire business logic inside comments and have some tool parse it successfully.
It sounds like you are talking about cgo. I think you have a stronger case there, but it is much the same situation: It's conceptually a third-party add-on that the Go language doesn't know anything about. "Cgo is not Go"[1]
I mean, if you really did have your own business logic language that you needed to include in Go code, where else would you put it if not in the "comments"? You, a random third-party, won't be able to add syntax to Go, so you cannot reasonably consider that to be an option. What syntax could Go add that is flexible enough to allow anyone to add anything they need, but that doesn't end up being comments by another token?
> A comment should be a comment, nothing more.
It's not really a comment, though. It is a directive. A comment is structured like `// Who the hell wrote this crap?`, while this is structured like `//tool:name args`.
I think what you are saying is that you don't like overloaded syntax, which is fair, but Go overloads syntax in several places so this is not a unique case. Besides, most languages end up with overloaded syntax in practice, so it isn't even something unique to Go.
[1] https://go-proverbs.github.io