Or maybe blacks, a minuscule portion of the population, are committing a disproportionate amount of the crime. Why cant you see that?  
I too understand how easy it'd be for a black person to be so dismissive of this information.
		
		
	 
Those crime statistics are a part of why I believe we do have systemic racism in our country.
It doesn't make sense for ~14% of the population to make up such a disproportionate amount of the prison population.
Your might argue, they're committing more of the crime; okay why is that?
You could claim it to be an innate trait of the Black population; which I doubt and I'd like an explanation for why the numbers weren't higher if that were the case.
You could claim it to be because of the Black population frequently overlapping with the population of people with lower income. And I might would agree. But why are Black people more representative in the lower income population?
For me, I'm inclined to point to systems that were used to prevent Black people from sharing in some of the periods of economic growth in the US making them have to play a game of catch up. Segregation really didn't end that long ago, and even when it did this doesn't mean other methods weren't created to make an environment that was hostile to Black prosperity. Read 
Black Like Me if you'd like to see some examples of this. And we have a history of doing this type of thing, read 
Slavery by Another Name for reference.
It doesn't seem unreasonable to me to propose that we have a system that acts recursively in a way that clearly disadvantages Black people; whether there's intent behind it or not.
Black people make up the higher prison population leading people to being more suspicious of Black people leading to Black people being more likely to get 
caught for a crime.
Black people represent more of the lower income population leading to higher associations with crime (whether deserved or not) leading to less opportunity leading to crime being a more favorable means of survival.
Black people develop a culture that creates a sense of solidarity but creates norms that are counter culture to the mainstream and are thus weary to outsiders because they don't understand it leading to a compulsion to assimilate to mainstream leading to a disconnect from the Black culture created out of solidarity creating division from the low-income Blacks to the more assimilated middle-income and high-income Blacks further stunting the prosperity of the Black population as a whole.
And these relationships intersect and there are more relationships than I've mentioned and it's a horrible twisted mess that is difficult to talk about.