For sure I can.
To stay with the task force, the tools they provide for family doctors, or even for women themselves to decide if they want screening, don't take into account additional risk factors. They don't take into account ethnicity. They don't take into account breast density. When you're only looking at the figures that apply to the typical white woman, you're not in a position to make an informed decision, because again, as you said, you're at higher risk for potential incidents in your forties.
If you don't know that, are you going to advocate for screening? If you don't know that, how are you going to make a sound decision? If you don't know your breast density, how are you going to know you're at risk? We know that dense breasts put you at a higher risk of breast cancer, but if you don't have a mammogram, you can't know what your density is.