By no means am I saying I should of been accepted. I'm actually saying the opposite, I don't fit the mold and probably lack many things, but I rather look at it as a whole. The truth is the staff at YC lack blacks or Hispanics. And just recently started accepting Hispanics and black founders out of a current trend/topic for tech companies to accept diversity. If it wasn't brought up, would YC have made it a point to accept more blacks or Hispanics/woman now?
I think YC is great, but they don't get the fact that founders can have a horrible application or even look horrible on paper.
Being an entrepreneur is not a cookie cut process, nor is business or anything else.
"And just recently started accepting Hispanics and black founders out of a current trend/topic for tech companies to accept diversity."
This is either very poorly worded or unfairly incorrect. When have they not accepted black or Hispanic founders?! They might have attracted mostly white/Asian applicants, but they have never precluded any group.
"...they don't get the fact that founders can have a horrible application or even look horrible on paper."
Of course they get that fact. They often speak about how often they miss opportunities - it's not a charity and they can't pick every winner in advance. They don't just judge applicants on paper. They take a video, and they look at product traction and so on. They have people from all sorts of backgrounds showing it's not a cookie cutter process.
But if you do a bad job at presenting/explaining yourself and your idea, there's every chance you'll have similar struggles pitching to investors and customers.
There's at least one black guy in that list and he's been there for a few years. He was also involved in one of their early and well-known investments.
You've implied that they only started accepting black/Hispanic people like they've been banned or something?!
I think YC is great, but they don't get the fact that founders can have a horrible application or even look horrible on paper.
Being an entrepreneur is not a cookie cut process, nor is business or anything else.