Overall, all of these problems arise because Bitcoin, unlike Monero, is a non-fungible coin.
Each Bitcoin has its own transaction history. The Bitcoin blockchain is transparent.
BTC is fungible and there is no problem with the BTC network in itself, the problem is with the government and centralized institutions attacking BTC's fungibility with things like 'blacklisted addresses and coins'.
BTC blockchain is transparent and the network is pseudonymous, but users can get a good level of anonymity with privacy tools like mixers and CoinJoin, and if they also use p2p services and avoid reusing addresses.
I don’t agree with you here....
Initially, Bitcoin coins do not have the property of identity and fungibility. Cash and Monero (XMR) have properties such as identity and fungibility.
Mixers, CoinJoin and other software tools aim to solve this problem, but are not a panacea.
As for the actions of governments and centralized institutions, these actions do not surprise me...
Bitcoin challenges them - and they are trying to curb it and bring it under their control. Bitcoin was originally conceived as a decentralized global currency independent of governments and centralized institutions (an antagonist to global fiat currencies).