n13 In this regard and in its professions of deference to the processes of local self-government, the Court wrongly elides any distinction between what state law commands and what the states permit. While foreclosure sales "under state law" may typically be sparsely attended and yield low prices, see infra, at 18, these are perhaps less the result of state law "strictures," ante, at 6, than of what state law fails to supply, incentives for foreclosing lenders to seek higher prices (by availing themselves of advertising or brokerage services, for example). Thus, in judging the reasonableness of an apparently low price, it will surely make sense to take into account (as the Court holds a bankruptcy court is forbidden to) whether a mortgagee who promptly re-sold the property at a large profit answers, "I did the most that could be expected of me" or "I did the least I was allowed to."