On the off chance your question was serious...
A lot of what we're experiencing in this country comes down to sowing and reaping. We're reaping now what was long sown into the fabric of this country.
A great example of systemic racism is looking back to the mid 20th century and how African Americans were deliberately excluded from the home wealth boom. I can't imagine anyone even arguing against this part. Here is a great video showing what happened...
Segregated By Design
Black Americans were segregated into certain sections of cities by design. Even middle class AA's who could certainly have afforded to move into the sprawling suburbs were denied loans, or the only loans they could get were so bad that at the time it made more sense to move into the black neighborhoods the government was corraling them into. Then redlining took place, where neighborhoods were rated based on perceived ability to pay back loans. The predominantly black districts were rated the lowest, making it extremely difficult for an AA to get a loan. So they were stuck where they were placed with no ability to get out until decades later, meaning an entire generation missed out on the wealth boom, you know that period of time our parents or grandparents call "the good ol' days". Those neighborhoods often turned into slums because of the growing wealth gap combined with the fact that services such as garbage collection ran much slower in those areas so it just looked worse.
Another example is the freeway system in some cities that destroyed what once were "good" black neighborhoods. In Richmond where I live, the construction of I-195 that cuts through an area of downtown demolished certain neighborhoods that at the time were decent AA neighborhoods. Now those are areas of town known as "lock your doors" territories.
I think your argument is going to be, "yeah, but that was like like 50 years ago. All they have to do is leave and go to better neighborhoods now." When centuries of blatant racist government policies have beaten down a group of people, it makes it extremely hard to get out of that cycle. Some have, but most haven't. We see the same pattern in the most impoverished white areas. I have participated in missions to a certain town in West Virginia that is as poor as any 3rd world country out there. The people there have no means to leave to go somewhere better. Psychologically, they believe there's nothing out there for them so they stay there living in conditions unimaginable. Now, it's not because of racism that they're in that position, but that's just kind of what happens generationally. Patterns and habits are handed from parent to child along with the wealth (or lack thereof) and on and on we go.
Why haven't Asian Americans faced the same dilemma? Well, it wasn't for a lack of trying by White America last century. But then, for some reason we became a little less racist towards Asians than we were African Americans. Studies have been done showing that at one time, Asians were being paid the same or less than Blacks doing the same job. But then we started paying them more for the same job. Then we started paying them the same as white people. I think that was the main factor. Yes, education and family structure was a priority for Asians, and that helped. But the wealth gap didn't destroy them like it did African Americans.