They aren't demanding personal responsibility or reducing out-of-wedlock births. On Wall Street Journal, Ian Rowe, a black resident fellow at American Enterprise Institute, wrote an excellent article called, "The Power of Personal Agency." Census data show that more than three million black students were enrolled in college or graduate school in 2018. According to the Washington Post, 23 unarmed black people were killed by police that year. This is 23 too many, yet roughly 136,000 black students were in higher education for each unarmed black person killed by police. A 2018 American Enterprise Institute report indicated that 57% of black men have reached middle class, a significant increase from 38% in 1960.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-power-of-personal-agency-11592770867?mod=searchresults&page=1&pos=1Teachers and parents need to cultivate a sense of personal responsibility from childhood. Having children out of wedlock and the absence of biological fathers are the top causes of poverty, which increases crime rates. 1 in 5 parents with two or more children have biological children with more than one partner. Of course, some of these children are born from remarriages, but having a first birth outside of marriage increases the odds of entering "multi-partner fertility." Numerous studies connect "multi-partner fertility" and father absence to behavior problems, aggression, and later criminality among boys, even when controlling for race and income.
https://ifstudies.org/blog/how-multiple-partner-fertility-influences-child-well-being.
https://www.theatlantic.com/notes/2015/10/the-breakdown-of-the-black-family-contd/410155/