No, I did not and will not get my children this vaccine.
I just wanted to point out that this is not true. First off, if you vaccinate, then you should be secure in your choice of believing that the vaxes protect your children. If your children are protected, how are they at risk? Second, Delaware offers two waivers, medical and religious. All states have a medical waiver. Most states, with the exception of West Virginia and Mississippi, offer a religious waiver, and you do not have to be of a specific religion to use it. Eighteen states offer a philosophical waiver.
There comes a point in an ordered society of lives(not souls) where the physical and medical rights and expectations of the majority of citizens outweigh the philosophical rights of the minority. When religious and/or medical beliefs have a negative effect on the greater common good, that of compromising public health, it is the right of citizenry to DEMAND compliance - regardless of the beliefs of those who wish not to comply.
Just as we mandate laws for sewage treatment, potable water, air quality, etc in part to stop the spread of disease, we also do similarly by trying to innoculate our citizens from disease. This is not a 3rd world country, nor do we live in the ignorance of the past. And though we remain ignorant of many pathologies, we have made great accomplishments in the past 100 years or so. We know the cause of, and can prevent many commonly occuring diseases that have large negative effects on the masses, and cause preventable suffering in large numbers of our citizens. Those who claim some religious or philosophical "right" to expose the majority of citizens to communicable disease and to aid and provide safe-harbor to pathogens which harm us, simply to satisfy their ideology, should be ostracized. They should be banned from the workplace and public areas, and likewise, their children should be banned from public schools. Part of a vaccination program is not just the prevention of the disease in individuals, but the eradication of the disease itself. Polio and Smallpox are prime examples of common devastating diseases that became almost unknown in the latter half of the 20th century due to aggressive vaccination efforts.
While our religious beliefs are varied, and some may say it's "God's will that disease occurs", many more of us tend to say that it's "God's will that we destroy or prevent disease". As a society of humans, we deal with the physical and living - preventing human suffering outweighs ideological insult. A person's soul is their own business. But one's body, from the standpoint that one may use it to harbor and/or spread disease, is not.
My philosophy is that if your philosophy includes allowing preventable disease and human suffering to continue when preventable, then your philosophy sucks. I condemn it.
/rant