You misunderstood what the is operator tests. It tests if two variables point the same object, not if two variables have the same value.
From the documentation for the is operator:
The operators is and is not test for object identity: x is y is true if and only if x and y are the same object.
Use the == operator instead:
print x == y
This prints True. x and y are two separate lists:
x[0] = 4
print y # prints [1, 2, 3]
print x == y # prints False
If you use the id() function you'll see that x and y have different identifiers:
>>> id(x)
4401064560
>>> id(y)
4401098192
but if you were to assign y to x then both point to the same object:
>>> x = y
>>> id(x)
4401064560
>>> id(y)
4401064560
>>> x is y
True
and is shows both are the same object, it returns True.