English edit

Etymology edit

According to Bruce Bartlett, the second sense was first used by an anonymous Reagan staffer in “We didn’t starve the beast. It’s still eating quite well—by feeding off future generations.”[1]

Verb edit

starve the beast (third-person singular simple present starves the beast, present participle starving the beast, simple past and past participle starved the beast)

  1. (US) To progressively weaken or destroy a dangerous or powerful entity through attrition.
  2. (US politics) To deprive the federal government of revenue by cutting taxes in an effort to force it to limit spending.

References edit

  1. ^ Bruce Bartlett (2007) ““Starve the Beast”: Origins and Development of a Budgetary Metaphor”, in The Independent Review[1], volume 12, number 1, archived from the original on 2023-06-25, page 5

Further reading edit