The social pathologies in groups of people with low income and low educational attainment tend to be common regardless of race. There are higher incidences of crime and violence, general antisocial behavior, aggression, disrespect for authority; promiscuity, father absence, poor spending habits, drug use, etc, etc. All of these behaviors decrease, across racial lines, when education and income levels increase.
It is symptomatic of racial bias when people observe these negative behaviors in both the Black and White communities, but only acknowledge them among African-Americans, and attribute them to racial characteristics, while ignoring the same behaviors among poor, less educated Whites. It is also indicative of racial bias when you refuse to address these negative behaviors among African-Americans because you are, again, actually attributing them to “Black culture”.