I do think it's good that you are doing that. What would be even better (and perhaps you are already doing this, and I've missed it or don't know where to look) is publicly calling on the investor class to put their hands in their pockets and make a charitable contribution to the next wave of up and comers. I specifically mean charitable, not for equity.
It seems to me that there's a lot of investors who could individually pitch in a few million without really missing it, but whose collective action would go a long way to mitigating the knock-on effects of a bank failure on small firms that are not themselves int he investment/financial engineering/risk management space, and can't be blamed (much) for trusting that a conservative-seeming brick-and-mortar bank would safeguard their cash deposits.
I think it's laudable that you're going to bat on behalf of YC companies, but you've got to be conscious of how it reads to the casual onlooker. 'Chastened investors rally round to help startups make payroll' is a much better headline than 'VCs beg Uncle Sam for cash lifeline'.
It seems to me that there's a lot of investors who could individually pitch in a few million without really missing it, but whose collective action would go a long way to mitigating the knock-on effects of a bank failure on small firms that are not themselves int he investment/financial engineering/risk management space, and can't be blamed (much) for trusting that a conservative-seeming brick-and-mortar bank would safeguard their cash deposits.
I think it's laudable that you're going to bat on behalf of YC companies, but you've got to be conscious of how it reads to the casual onlooker. 'Chastened investors rally round to help startups make payroll' is a much better headline than 'VCs beg Uncle Sam for cash lifeline'.