So the question is why are those communities committing more crime in the first place and why is it seemingly disproportionately black people? Assuming it must just be due to a factor of intentionality is ignoring other systemic aspects that affect black people in a similarly disproportionate factor.
The largest factor is our culture. African American culture, as it has developed since the mid 80s especially, is our own worst enemy. We're barraged with messages that gangbanging, sleeping around, having countless baby-mommas, serial welfare living, using drugs, sagging pants, glorifying women who act like [bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse]s and ratchets, and normalizing committing crime as the way of life we should be aspiring to. African American men that take responsibility and get jobs and go to college are looked down on as trying to 'fit in' with the white man's world.
It's not some 'sustemic aspects that affect black people in a similarly disproportionate factor'. It's african american culture itself (note that's why I clearly stated African American numerous times above, instead of 'black'). People who are also black, coming over from Africa with not a cent to their name, from environments and poverty far worse than most of us here could even dream of, are one of the most successful migrant groups when they come to the US. Somehow they manage to do leaps and bounds better than African-Ameicans, despite being black, having that same skin color. That indicates that there isn't any such 'systemic aspects' or 'systemic racism' that we can blame. It's time for the community to grow the heck up, take responsibility for our own issues, and work to make positive change instead of adopting this liberal victim complex to pass blame off on the white man for all of our own ills caused by our own culture.
People seem to keep going in the direction of, "Well, if black people just worked harder, they wouldn't be in such a bad situation," or the like,
WOrking harder would certainly be a good start, but sure, changing the culture is very much needed.
which is assuming all poverty and factors that can contribute to higher likelihood of committing crimes, is just a matter of work instead of a system that is stacked against their success in any meaningful way (redlining, Jim Crow, all manner of social stereotypes, the list goes on for how there isn't fair opportunity given, just the pretense of equality like in segregation)
Poverty can certainly be a factor in likelihood of crime. But it's not the be-all end-all. Other similarly poverty stricken populations of other races/cultures don't have remotely close to the amount of crime that African-Americans have.
And there you go at the end trying to push it off on things that happened in the past. We did not have these problems after Jim Crow Ended, and we were MUCH closer to the effects of Jim Crow then, so if that was the issue, the problems would have been worse and clearer then. No, the issues have developed with the entrance of the welfare state to our communities, the destruction of the nuclear family as a result, and the development of the glorification of gangbanging/rap culture and lifestyle. That's been the worst poison to our community and culture. Not anything white people did decades ago. But what we have allowed to happen to our culture and community ourselves.