In my opinion the question would've been more useful had it asked how to execute external commands one after the other with no mention of Python, apart from maybe including it in the example command (and having the asker maybe later ask about Python specifically if the general answer doesn't work).
But it asked specifically about Python, so you shouldn't be quick to edit that out, in case there's an answer that would be specific to Python.
If you come back after some time (a few days or weeks or whatever) and see a bunch of answers (one of which is accepted) which are all clearly have nothing to do with Python, you could consider editing it out at that stage, to make it more useful as a reference post for duplicates. This would include removing the tag, but also editing the title and body to ask the more general question (but without removing the specific details, e.g. "I execute an external command (a Python script) from my browser...").
My argument for saying this is:
- We can't really close a more general question as a duplicate of a less general one, even if the less general one only has more general answers. A user would be less inclined to accept their question is actually a duplicate if we do this.
- If someone is wondering about Python specifically (and the more general solutions don't work in their case), a question with only general answers won't help them anyway, and they'd be better off asking a new question (or adding a bounty, but ... meh).