Drain the swamp is a term which has been used primarily by American politicians. The term alludes to the historical draining of swamps to keep mosquito populations low to combat malaria. The term has since been used as a metaphor by:
Winfield R. Gaylord (1870 – 1943) to describe the socialist desire to "drain" the "capitalist swamp".
Victor L. Berger (1860 – 1929), who in his book Broadsides referred to changing the capitalist system as "drain[ing] the swamp"
Ronald Reagan, who called for "drain[ing] the swamp" of bureaucracy in the federal government in 1983.
Jessica Stern in "Preparing for a...
@wilx In software engineering, I've heard it used (semi-frequently) in reverse, as in: "I don't want to drain the whole swap, just fix this bitty little piece..."
@wilx I haven't so much recently, but years ago (writing code for MS-DOS, if that's any indication of time frame) a guy I worked with used the phrase a fair amount--pretty much every time I wanted to really fix something, instead of just adding another patch to the five layers already present...
So, I just noticed the guy, by the fact that he's always singing and making noises (obviously?). I noticed that since he was ~3y/o. I rarely bump into them, but last june my daughter ran into them at a "student play-off/demo concert" (what do you call that) and she remembered I wanted to ask them to stop by in case he'd like to play around with the piano
@CaptainGiraffe That joke is over my cultural reference horizon. Pancakes?
I can obviously teach things, and the usual "excuse" that I lack pedagogy is moot here: moost teachers would have to complete adjust their program
Well, there's still dealing with kids and their attention spans, but then again, I bet on it that the sheer fact that I will invest the time and attention to see what he needs/wants will compensate a bit
@Mysticial I've certainly heard civil engineers refer to building walls (though certainly not the wall, so to speak).
@CaptainGiraffe Where at? Parts of Texas are currently at around 1.2 meters of rain in the last ~4 days (but I haven't heard of any up to 2 meters yet).