We face, he said, to a breed of degenerates. A mestizo race, little better than blacks. I may not even. In Mexico there is no government. What the hell, in Mexico there is no God. There will never be. We face a manifestly incapacitated people to govern themselves. And you know what happens with the people who do not know how to govern themselves? Exact: others come to govern for them.
In Cormac McCarthy's "Meridian of Blood," the narrator expresses a deeply cynical view of Mexico and its people. He describes them as a "breed of degenerates," suggesting a belief that they lack the ability to govern themselves. He goes as far as to claim that there is no effective government or divine presence in Mexico, which he perceives as a state of chaos devoid of order or leadership.
This sentiment reflects a broader theme about the consequences of a population deemed incapable of self-governance. The narrator implies that when a society is unable to manage its own affairs, it becomes susceptible to external forces taking control. This stark outlook offers a commentary on power dynamics and the nature of authority within a struggling civilization.