Sorry but I think you missed my point. And I am puzzled as to why you are pointing the finger at black people. Let us not make this about race. Living where I live, I understand that it is not social programs that is causing society to break down across all races, it IS income inequality and lack of jobs.
A lack of opportunity is certainly a problem. Income inequality has been with us pretty much since there was income and never caused social collapse until recently. This is why I suspect a large part of the problem is caused by social programs.
To give you an example, one street where I lived until fairly recently had a reasonable range of people on it. We had one single mother with four children who seemed like a decent enough person but was obviously down on her luck. We had a few young professional couples who were obviously earning good money, and we had everything in between. So in terms of aspiration people could see what "the next step on the ladder" might look like, and aspire to be like Mr and Mrs Smith at number 43. If they achieved their dream, perhaps the next step would be to be more like Mr and Mrs Patel at number 18. And so on.
The problem is when housing prices rise the people on the lower end of the income range gradually get shaken out because only the wealthy can afford to live there. But then comes along a housing project that purports to help people get onto the housing ladder. The trouble is it's usually only available for those at the very bottom of the socioeconomic spectrum, which means that the housing area gets polarised. Which is exactly what happened in another street I used to live on. On one side of the road were seriously run down blocks of social housing while on the other side of the road were huge detached executive homes with brand new Mercedes and BMW cars on the driveway. There's no sense of trying to climb the ladder and seeing what the next step would look like - the people in the social housing would probably never live like the people they saw just across the road every single day. Hence their hope is squashed while their neighbors live in the fear borne of "I hope I never end up like them".
We don't have to question that ultimately everything belongs to God. But Jesus never told us to go and plunder someone else's wealth to fulfil our commission. Jesus told us what to do, and we can do that to the best of our ability using whatever resources we have at our disposal. Since when were Christians in the business of trying to force other people to do our work for us?