"make sunsets" lol
Thankfully most of the companies they back are busy working on B2B SASS and crypto nonsense that is unlikely to have any significant impact, positive or negative. Gaffes like the ill-timed Sequoia profile of Sam Bankman Fried make it clear that venture capitalists don't have any unique wisdom or insight.
I've worked extensively in VC, but back in the late 90's and 2000's, when there were a few people with specific interests and lots of money, who helped clever people develop ideas in certain areas. Venture Capital firms were focused on certain issues, and didn't fund just any ole project that came across the transom with a hockey stick projected adoption curve. They'd say, "Great idea, but not my area of investment interest. Go talk to XYZ. They are interested in that area." But a couple of big visible successes brought every swinging dick into the VC market, and then shit got dicey. VCs stopped asking pointy questions because there was a feeding frenzy and they had to move fast if they wanted to get in on the profitable financing rounds. I was in meetings where the VCs in the room didn't really like the idea, but they liked the person presenting the idea so they invested to get in on their good side, and get first crack at their NEXT idea. Seriously. "Sure, we'll give you $5m for this initial round of financing on that pet app, but let us know what else you are working on - even at the conceptual stages - because we think you have a bright future ahead of you." AND, it created a shitty feedback loop. Goober develops an app, sells it for $150m, and it tanks, but Goober now has $150m that HE is going to invest.... despite not ever developing a working/quality product, or understanding anything about how to grow a company. Y Combinator now has a dozen of these dipshits on their investment staff, and I guarantee every other tech investment house has the same types of people on their staff. There is so much money available out there today, it is ridiculous. But there are very few companies I'd accept an investment from, specifically for this reason.
One of the talking heads in Netflix's Madoff documentary points out that once upon a time, "hedged funds" were all about strategies to make money if the market went sideways or backwards, so you could "hedge" your bets. Then The Money figured out that you could just shove money in a hedge fund and buy whatever through access. Hedge funds, ultimately, buy stuff that's for sale. Lots of hedge fund assholes blew up in the '80s and regulation changed. More hedge fund assholes blew up in the '90s and regulation changed again. Then Marc Andreesen stole Mosaic, called it Netscape and hedge fund assholes decided AOL was worth more than Time Warner. Behold. Andreesen Horowitz. It's all bullshit money breaking the rules. fuck'em.