English

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Etymology

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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

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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

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  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

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