by Cory Massimino
http://c4ss.org/content/29932
Markets Not Capitalism: A Review
Markets not Capitalism is a wonderfully compiled set of readings spanning 150 years of the market anarchist tradition. We must first commend Gary Chartier and Charles Johnson on their work in bringing all this great literature together and bundling it in a fantastic book for those interested in what market anarchism truly has to offer, as stated by its most ardent supporters of both past and present.
Itโs hard to believe the number of genius thinkers who have writings in Markets not Capitalism: Benjamin Tucker, Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, Voltarine de Cleyre, Karl Hess, Roy Childs, William Gillis, Kevin Carson, Roderick Long, and Sheldon Richman to name a few. The compilation truly blends together the 19th century individualist anarchist tradition with the modern left libertarian thinkers who are following in the formerโs footsteps.
Since this book has so many great readings, I will only go over some of my favorite ones here.
First, the introduction itself, written by Gary Chartier and Charles Johnson, is a fantastic and concise overview of what market anarchism truly stands for. They write,
The social relationships that market anarchists explicitly defend, and I hope to free from all forms of government control, are relationships based on: ownership of propertyโฆcontract and voluntary exchangeโฆfree competitionโฆentrepreneurial discoveryโฆspontaneous order.
Thatโs it. Those five things are fundamentally what market anarchism is about. It is about letting people be free to use their own property as they choose and cooperate with others in order to create the kind of society they want. Those five principles allow for a society free of control and domination. They birth a society of liberation and bottom-up organization with individuals in control of their own lives.
Following the introduction, the book is separated into eight sections. Iโve spontaneously decided to go over a reading from each.
Part 1: The Problem of Deformed Markets
Pierre-Joseph Proudhonโs โGeneral Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Centuryโ paints a picture of the kind of economy that is painfully obvious to recognize today. Except he identified the problems in 1851. Perhaps with an unnecessary amount of capitalization (in the grammar sense, not the economic sense), Proudhon was, nonetheless, the doctor who most aptly diagnosed the economy as one controlled and dominated by corporate capitalists, banksters, and statist legislators.
The trio conspired (conspires is more accurate) against the common man and extracted surplus value from workers, borrowers, and renters through the privilege of capital over labor granted by the state, the artificial concentration of credit by advantaged and usurious banks, the artificial restriction of land through state ownership and direction, and general state-enacted plunder. Sound familiar?
Proudhon believed the economy ought to be guided by the natural economic forces of competition and the division of labor, rather than the state and capitalists. โTo suppress competition is to suppress liberty itself.โ
But because of statist intervention, competition โis today a matter of exceptional privilege: only they whose capital permits them to become heads of business concerns may exercise their competitive rights.โ As a result,
[competition]โฆinstead of democratizing industry, aiding the workman, guaranteeing the honesty of trade, has ended in building up a mercantile and land aristocracy a thousand times more rapacious than the old aristocracy of the nobility.
I donโt want to think of how much more rapacious todayโs aristocracy is.
Due to the state created capitalist ruling class, Proudhon came to reject capitalism in addition to government. He explains,
In the same way the wage-worker of the great industries, had been crushed into a condition worse than that of a slave, by the loss of the advantage of collective force.
There is hope according to Proudhon though,
But by the recognition of his right to the profit from his force, of which he is the producer, he resumes his dignity, he regains comfort; the great industries, terrible organs of aristocracy and pauperism become, in their turn, one of the principle organs of liberty and public prosperityโฆ
Part 2: Identities and Isms
In โAdvocates of Freed Markets Should Oppose Capitalismโ Gary Chartier makes a compelling case that goes against nearly 100 years of libertarian rhetoric: friends of freedom ought to also be anti-capitalists.
The kind of anti-capitalism that Charter supports is, he argues, a truer representation of libertarian and anarchist principles. He is not opposed to private property, voluntary exchange or markets. This kind of anti-capitalism harkens back to the arguments and rhetoric of the 19th century individualist anarchists, such as Pierre-Joseph Proudhon and Benjamin Tucker.
Chartier distinguishes between three senses of the word โcapitalismโ:
- An economic system that features personal property rights and voluntary exchanges for goods and services.
- An economic system that features a symbiotic relationship between big business and government.
- Rule โ of workplaces, society, and (if there is one) the state, by capitalists (that is, by a relatively small number of people who control investable wealth and the means of production).
Capitalism, in the second sense is obviously against libertarian principles. Chartier also argues capitalism, in the third sense is also against libertarian principles because it 1) requires coercion and state interference to be maintained and 2) such a system is antithetical to the kinds of commitments to personal autonomy and sovereignty libertarian generally hold.
Obviously if capitalism is meant in the first sense, it is merely synonymous with a freed market, and therefore, it would make no sense for market anarchists to oppose it. But words and labels are a tricky business. He lists seven reasons to be anti-capitalist generally:
- To emphasize the specific undesirability of capitalism in sense 3
- To differentiate proponents of freed markets from vulgar market enthusiasts
- To emphasize that the freed market really is an unknown ideal
- To challenge the conception of the market economy that treats capital as more fundamental than labor
- To reclaim โSocialismโ for freed market radicals
- To express solidarity with workers
- To identify with the legitimate concerns of the global anticapitalist movement
In short,
Freed-market advocates should embrace โanti-capitalismโ in order to encapsulate and highlight their full-blown commitments to freedom and their rejection of alternatives that use talk of liberty to conceal acquiescence in exclusion, subordination, and deprivation.
Part 3: Ownership
Roderick Longโs โA Plea for Public Propertyโ is kind of like a slap in the face to many libertarians. Long uses three traditionally libertarian arguments to justify the existence of public (not state owned, but rather owned by the โunorganizedโ public) property in a libertarian society. Contrary to many libertariansโ claims that in a free society, all property will be private, Long contends it is both coherent and desirable for there to be public property as well.
In line with the Lockean defense of private property as an extension of an individual who homesteads previously un-owned things, Long writes,
Since collectives, like individuals can mix their labor with un-owned resources to make those resources more useful to their purposes, collectives, too, can claim property rights by homestead.
Long uses the example of people slowly clearing a way for a path over time through their combined efforts of walking through it.
Many libertarian use a line of argument that goes something like private property is needed for the realization of personal autonomy. Without a place to really call your own, your autonomy is very limited. This is true as far as it goes but the argument extends to public property as well. What about the autonomy of the property-less? Those without the means to have property certainly wonโt have any sense of autonomy in the propertarian world. Having spaces that are publicly owned alongside private property allows people of small means to retain their autonomy somewhat.
Private property is also often defended on grounds that public property suffers from the tragedy of the commons. That is, a space that is publicly owned will be overused and depleted because no one using it has a stake in it and no incentive to leave anything for anyone else. But, as Long points out, this only applies to actually rivalrous goods and not things like ideas or the internet. There is also good reason to think in some cases there is a โmore-the-merrierโ effect. He points to arguments made by Carol Rose and David Schmidt that in addition to the tragedy of the commons, there is also a โcomedy of the commonsโ that makes public space benefit from more people (like a free town fair).
Long continues through some common objections and concludes,
Ultimately, these problems will have to be resolved by a libertarian legal system, through evolving common-law precedentsโฆAn all private system can be oppressive, just as an all public one can be; but a system that allows networks of private spaces and public spaces to compete against each other offers the greatest scope for individual freedom.
The importance in Longโs piece is that libertarian are often depicted, sometimes accurately, as propertarians. But this shouldnโt be true at all. Libertarian arguments provide a robust defense of real (that is, no state owned) public property.
Part 4: Corporate Power and Labor Solidarity
In โEconomic Calculation in the Corporate Commonwealth,โ Kevin Carson applies Misesโ calculation problem and Hayekโs knowledge problem to private firms. While the two ideas have been historically used to criticize state planning, and Mises denied the calculation problem applied to businesses, Carson argues the two provide resounding arguments against the viability of large, hierarchical companies in a freed market.
The calculation problem, in short, states that โa market in factors of production is necessary for pricing production inputs so that a planner may allocate them rationally.โ Mises showed this to be the fatal flaw of Socialism since the abolition of private property, and therefore prices, destroys any opportunity for the rational allocation of resources. Simply, Socialism is just not possible.
But firms are islands of central planning themselves. There are no prices within firms themselves. Carson writes,
The basic cause of calculational chaos, as Mises understood it, was the separation of entrepreneurial from technical knowledge and the attempt to make production decisions based on technical considerations alone, without regard to such entrepreneurial considerations as factor pricing.
But that isnโt the end of the story, Contra Mises, Carson explains,
But the principle also works the other way: production decisions based solely on input and product prices, without regard to the details of production also result in calculational chaos.
That is, Misesโ calculation argument actually does apply to private firms in addition to governments.
Then Hayek came along with another death blow for central planning: โNot generation or source of data, but the sheer volume of data to be processed.โ Carson applies Hayekโs discovery to the firm,
The large corporation necessarily distributes the knowledge relevant to informed entrepreneurial decisions among many departments and sub-departments until the cost of aggregating that knowledge outweighs the benefits of doing so.
As the firm becomes larger and larger, it is more prone to knowledge problems and loses its ability to rationally allocate resources within the firm.
But this seems like a non-problem. After all, Carson explains firms will โdistribute information until the cost of distributing knowledge outweighs the benefit of doing so.โ He writes later,
The calculation problem may or not exist to some extent in the private corporation in a free market. But the boundary would be set by the point at which the benefits of size cease to outweigh the costs of such calculational problems. The inefficiencies of large size and hierarchy may be a matter of degree, but, as Ronald Coase said, the market would determine whether the inefficiencies are worth it.
The problem is there is no free market. This was the problem diagnosed in part one of Markets not Capitalism. Carson explains the myriad of ways in which state intervention makes calculation in the corporate commonwealth a real problem,
By state capitalism, I refer to the means by which, as Murray Rothbard said, โour corporate state uses the coercive taxing power either to accumulate corporate capital or to lower corporate costs,โ in addition to cartelizing markets through regulations, enforcing artificial property rights like โintellectual property,โ and otherwise protecting privilege against competition.
The kinds of policies that Proudhon identified in 1851, and are unfathomably more pertinent, widespread, and harmful today, prop up large, hierarchical corporations by socializing their losses. State intervention artificially raise the point where firms will stop distributing knowledge and creating hierarchy, making the kinds of firms we see in todayโs corporate capitalism profitable. Whereas, in a freed market, they would be crushed by competition.
What makes โEconomic Calculation in the Corporate Commonwealthโ such a breath of fresh air is that libertarians have, for one reason or another, become apologists for corporations. In trying to defend free market principles, libertarians have often fallaciously become supporters for all things not directly run by the state, including corporations. But this is a mistake, as Carson notes, because the biggest corporations are also the biggest parasites. He takes modern libertarianism to task for misunderstanding the role of the state in propping up big business and vice versa. Big corporations rely on state power to retain influence and money, to deny alternative forms of business, and to oppress the common person. Rather than pinnacles of the free market, big corporations are spawns of leviathan.
Part 5: Neoliberalism, Privatization, and Redistribution
Thereโs a delicious irony in this book featuring an article by the founder of modern anarcho-capitalism. โConfiscation and the Homestead Principleโ shows us a different side of Murray Rothbard. One that supports โ[turning] over ownership to the homesteading workers in the particular plantsโ at the time owned by General Dynamics.
In one of Rothbardโs most underappreciated and least well known pieces of writing, he takes issue with the fervent anti-communists of his day failing to ever provide an actual mechanism by which we could un-socialize. Noticing this failure, Rothbard offers a solution by which libertarians (synonymous with anarchists for him) can end the reign of state owned property and put that property in the hands of actual homesteaders.
Unfortunately, itโs impossible to return state property back to its original owners since we canโt effectively determine which stolen tax dollars belonged to whom. Instead, Rothbard offers the next best solution and uses public universities as an example. Since the tax payers canโt be justly compensated, turning public property over to those who use it, and thereby homestead it, is the next best solution. In the case of universities, the facilities and buildings should be turned over to faculty and students who have effectively homesteaded the property.
But Rothbard doesnโt stop there. He recognizes the existence of state capitalism and understands how it blurs the line between โpublicโ and โprivateโ property. General Dynamics is a beneficiary of the military industrial complex and receives over half itโs funding from the state (stolen money). Clearly this company, and others that similarly receive most of their funding from the state lack a just claim of ownership.
They, too, need to be dismantled and the property transferred to the people homesteading it. In the case of General Dynamics, and most corporations, this is the workers. Since the owners of the corporation are merely an extension of the state, the actual workers have the best claim on the property.
Rothbard concludes,
What we libertarians object to, then, is not the government per se but crime, what we object to is unjust or criminal property titles, what we are for is not โprivateโ property per se but just, innocent, non-criminal private property. It is justice vs injustice, innocence vs criminality that must be our major libertarian focus.
Too often libertarians become apologists for so called โprivateโ property and, in the process, become defenders of the statist quo. Rothbard is correctly pointing out libertarianism is a truly radical philosophy concerned with just property claims, not one that picks a side between the โpublicโ vs โprivateโ false dichotomy.
Part 6: Inequality and Social Safety Nets
One of the major tasks of this book, and the market anarchist project in general, is to demolish the false choice of freed markets or equality. Too often these two things are posed as conflicting ideals. That you must tolerate inequality to support freed markets or you must tolerate state control and intervention to support equality. Even libertarians fall into the trap of seeing the two as competing visions and not recognizing the levelling power of markets. In โLet the Free Market Eat the Rich: Economic Entropy as Revolutionary Redistributionโ Jeremy Weiland takes this false worldview to task.
Now โeat the richโ might sound like dirty liberal or socialist rhetoric. But a proper understanding of state capitalism and the kinds of institutions that make up modern economic systems leads one to understand why eating the rich is both desirable and libertarian. As Rothbard explained in the last section, state capitalism blurs the line between โpublicโ and โprivateโ property. But why does it do this? Because the state is controlled by the rich. It is a tool the powerful, politically entrenched elite use to create large sums of wealth not through voluntary exchange and the free market, but through exploitation and state intervention. The common framing that itโs the state vs big business and the rich is completely wrong. On the contrary, the state and the rich are partners in crime, and often one in the same. To be anti-state is to be anti-rich (in the world as we know it, not anti-rich in a conceptual sense). In the words of Roderick Long, โLibertarianism is the true proletariat revolution.โ
Jeremy Weiland explains, โThe modern corporation is a legal entity chartered by the state.โ It benefits from a huge variety of intervention including fiat entity status, personhood, and limited liability. All of which tilt the market in favor of well established, large corporations at the expense of smaller competitors and would be market participants. Simply put, โIn a free market, corporations would not be able to rely on the state for their very existence.โ Absent the state intervention, the true levelling forces of the market would come to fruition.
What about personal estates? The state created benefits donโt stop at just corporations. Weiland argues, โThe biggest subsidy enjoyed by the wealthy lies in government regulation of finance.โ After all, regular joes donโt โpayโ for that service in proportion to their deposits. Low income people with less investments and deposits subsidize the rich through virtually all central bank regulation and FDIC policy. Barriers to entry in banking make it even worse by preventing workers from forming their own mutual banks and being forced to participate in the capitalist controlled banking sham.
Property protection itself is tilted in favor of the wealthy. Not only are the rich more likely to game the โjusticeโ system (because the state monopoly answers to no one as long as there is no competition in arbitration), the rich are again subsidized by the poor through police protection. Wealthy people obviously have much more property than lower income people and need a much higher quantity of protective services (as well as a higher quality of protection since they are more likely to be targeted by thieves). But there is no market for property protection. Instead everyone pays through taxes and the rich use a higher proportion of police protect than anyone elseโฆsubsidized by the poor.
Weiland points out,
A truly free market without subsidized security, regulation, and arbitration imposes cost on large aggregations of assets that quickly deplete them.
He concludes,
Perhaps authentic libertarian means of genuinely free markets, taken to their logical conclusion, can effect far more egalitarian and redistributionist ends than we ever dreamed โ not as a function of any central State, but rather as a result of its absence.
Part 7: Barriers to Entry and Fixed Cost of Living
A large part of the market anarchist project is showing ways in which the state harms the worst off among us and how freed markets truly help the poor, thereby melding our commitment to freedom and non-violent egalitarianism. As explained above, liberty and equality are not conflicting ideals. Rather, they are complementary. It is statism and equality that are simply incompatible. Charles Johnsonโs โScratching Byโ serves as a concise list of way in which statist interventions, often touted as egalitarian, actually make the poor worse off.
Welfare schemes tend to keep poor people dependent on the state, creating an endless cycle of poverty. But in addition to fostering a culture of subservience, they also prevent a different kind of culture from taking the place of statism and coercive, inefficient anti-poverty measures. Johnson explains,
But in a free market โ a truly free market, where individual poor people are just as free as established formal-economy players to use their own property, their own labor, their own know-how, and the resources that are available to them โ the informal, enterprising actions of poor people themselves would do far more to systematically undermine or completely eliminate, each of the stereotypical conditions that welfare statists deplore.
Of course the housing crisis of the 2000s not only led to a horrible crash crippling many poor peoplesโ lives (and leaving the rich fine and dandy with bailouts and quantitative easing), it also created a system where renters and other low income people were subsidizing the housing of the better-off. Yes, housing subsidies did provide options for housing to people who otherwise wouldnโt have had it (of course, that, itself, is the fault of government land ownership, eminent domain, zoning laws, and credit policy). But those subsidies to homeowners was coming from non-homeowners, who tend to be poorer. This redistribution scheme was directly shifting money from the bottom of the economic ladder to the middle and topโฆand following the 2008 crash, the big banks were free to seize the homes, pushing the homeowners back to dire situations and leaving the original subsidizers still poor.
Johnsons also goes into depth about the scam of urban homesteading and how housing codes and regulations make it much more difficult for people to actually acquire property of their own, forcing them to remain dependent on landlords. Licensures, despite being promoted as consumer safety measures, actually impede competition and keep poor people out of the market. Costly (meaning both time and money) licenses lock poor people out of certain jobs and artificially restrict their employment options. He writes,
Government regimentation of land, housing, and labor creates and sustains the very structure of urban poverty.
Rather than the cure for poverty, the state is the cause. The war on poverty would be more aptly named as the war on the poor.
Part 8: Freed Market Regulation: Social Activism and Spontaneous Order
Roderick Longโs โPlatonic Productivityโ is a fascinating article that forces libertarians to rethink a lot of their arguments but also examine their commitments. Libertarians and defenders of the market often point out that employees will be paid according to their marginal revenue product (MRP). Therefore, the fact that women are paid on 75 cents for every dollar a man is paid is a sign of a real difference in productivity between the sexes. After all, if it wasnโt, the gap would be whittled away from competition. So, the libertarian concludes, the market is working fine! There is no need for government intervention here.
But, as Long, points out, there is merely a tendency for workers to be paid according to their MRP. For reasons Mises pointed out, the market never reaches equilibrium. Instead, it is always approaching equilibrium. The same goes for workers being paid according to their MRP.
Furthermore, since firms are, at their core, islands of central planning separated from the price mechanism internally, determining a workerโs MRP can be difficult. There is no easy way to figure out a workerโs MRP from within a firm so even โwell-meaning,โ profit driven employers not looking to discriminate can create a persistent wage gap. Long also points out discrimination can act as a consumerโs good for employers, allowing actual discrimination to persist. Instead of buying brand new carpeting for their office, an employer might spend those profits (or more accurately, never earn those profits) from discriminatory hiring practices.
Despite seemingly looking like an indictment of the market and begging for government intervention, Long points out why asking the state to solve this problem is misguided.
Thereโs no reason to think transferring decision-making authority from employers to the State would bring wages into any better alignment with productivity. People in government are crooked timber too, and (given economic democracyโs superior efficiency in comparison with political democracy) theyโre even less constrained by any sort of accountability than private firms are.
Rather than a reason to give up our commitment to markets, Longโs argument is merely a reminder that the market is, itself, made up of fallible people with biases and imperfections. The market isnโt God. But of course, neither is the State.
Long finishes by pointing out,
Once we see why the productivity theory of wages, though correct as far as it goes, goes less far than its proponents often suppose, it does not seem implausible to suppose that this sexism plays some role in explaining the wage gap, and such sexism needs to be combatedโฆ But thatโs no reason to gripe about โmarket failure.โ Such failure is merely our failure. Instead, we need to fight the power โ peacefully, but not quietly.
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If you cannot differentiate between Corporatism and Capitalism you end up talking nonsense about ‘markets’, see above!
In other words, Chartier’s “true capitalism” excludes private business ownership.
Which is why, as I’ve often said, in my view anarchists are not libertarians. They’re just wreckers.
Also-
While there are indeed central planning problems in business enterprises (or any enterprise, including everything from sports clubs to families to churches), Carson overlooks a fundamental flaw in his reasoning- which is that the business economy is not complete. It contains no end users (consumers), who are externalised, and thus pricing from actual consumers external to the business enables the “ripple through” of pricing information. The business is not- like society or the economy in general- attempting to satisfy its workers like consumers. They are simply there because they are bribed with wages. Their wage demands provide the only necessary pricing information to the business’s internal economy.
At which point, his argument falls apart, as do all his arguments as a rule.
And
This bit of Feminist dishonest agitprop has been debunked so many times now that it’s basically depressing seeing it trotted out again, especially by a nominal libertarian.
Blast it. David, Sean, somebody — would you want to close the blockquote that I missed? My apologies to all.
This is something I think many Libertarians don’t really grasp, when they try to define government. Government is just an advanced, institutionalised form of common ownership. This is why I think anarchists miss the point; as soon as they start advocating communal things they’re advocating governance of some form.
This is why I don’t actually have a particular problem with government itself; it is inevitable. Any communal activity of humans- whether in land, or say a religion, is inevitably going to have government. (Indeed, much of the argument between Protestant groups has been over the form of Church governance). (And yes, I am saying “governance” and “government” are synonymous. Government is governance with a letterhead).
So to me, Libertarianism is not about abolishing governance. It is about what form of relationship will exist between the governing structure and the governed. Which again, is similar to the debates and schisms in Protestantism, over the relationship between their church governance structures and the church membership.
Well … thinking it about still more (been thinking about it for quite awhile now), it occurs to me that that’s potentially a good reason to define “government” as the body (whether one or many) which has a “monopoly on force.” Or at least to include that as part of the definition. But there’s a problem. Even in the U.S. (and I assume also in the U.K.; indeed, in the West generally) there are obviously private security forces, where the guards are armed and empowered to enforce either the rules of the establishment or the government’s own laws by means of firearms.
So the usual definition doesn’t work either.
So what can “a government” do that can’t be done by the tribal Council of Elders, or some other, less formally designated person or persons?
It can set rules which everyone must obey, and rules which some but not others must obey. It can restrain and punish those who break its rules, by means of forced incarceration or even death, as well as by fines and community service. It can set the terms of punishment. And it has the recognition of these powers by the people it governs, but this recognition may or may not be formal; Parliament and Congress are formally recognized as being so empowered, I guess, even though there are Brits and Americans who claim not to recognize their governments as legitimate. Hm. Interesting topic for discussion.
Perhaps, given a person or a bunch having the powers above, what makes it a government is, in the end, the fact that the people who must follow its rules and accept its punishments — and its arranging of their lives and their activities — call it a government.
In any case, Ian, I agree with you that some sort of gov, whether -ernance or -ernment , is inevitable.
I wish Paul or some other knowledgeable historian hereabouts would weigh in on the claim that most of Ireland was in fact an anarchy (“in a state of anarchy”?) for a thousand years. I read that just in the last week…and already I can’t remember where. h.p.o. perhaps.
Ian and Julie are right about the business matter.
Ludwig Von Mises did not use the word “capitalism” by accident – he knew it was coined by the Marxists and the other enemies of large scale private ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange, but he used the word “capitalism” precisely because it got to the nub of the matter.
Talking about “markets not capitalism” is garbage – and it is evil garbage.
“Markets” (in a large scale society) are meaningless if there is not large scale private ownership of the means of the production, distribution and exchange.
In practice those who are the enemies of people such as Jon Huntsman (senior) and Charles and David Koch (whatever their faults – real or false) are the enemies of libertarianism.
The enemies of “capitalism” (i.e. the large scale private ownership of the means of production, distribution and exchange) are the enemies of libertarianism.
Period.
As an example of a company, a business, that was doing what turned out to be lethal damage to people, presumably* out of simple ignorance and not for any reprehensible reason, this excerpt from MedPage Today:
http://www.medpagetoday.com/Rheumatology/GeneralRheumatology/46972
*It’s perfectly possible to know something but talk yourself into believing it ain’t so, or that in the particular case the effects are too slight to matter, or the evidence of harmfulness is insufficient to make it reasonable to forgo some action or to change to a different method or whatever. It’s also possible to fail to investigate adequately because one fears the results of the investigation.
But that sort of thing is what W.R. Grace was acquitted of.