Me, I am still wearing it because not everyone has been offered the vaccine yet.
However, once the President or some other government official says that everyone in the USA has had the opportunity to receive the vaccine, I am done wearing masks. If someone chooses not to get vaccinated, then that is their choice.
A lot of the people who simply choose not to get vaccinated are the conspiracy-theory folks who think the virus is a hoax and the vaccine is going to inject everyone with a microchip. Those people don't care if you wear a mask or not because they're not going to, either.
Other people will want to get the vaccine, but be unable to for medical reasons. I feel bad for those people because their only protection is in the choices of people around them, and a lot of people are not very considerate (see conspiracy theory nut jobs above). I don't think the immunocompromised state of some imposes a moral obligation on everyone else to wear masks forever, but I do think we need something closer to herd immunity before we get rid of the masks.
There is currently no approved vaccine for children. Although kids typically have less severe symptoms, some do get very sick and some have died. Additionally, they can be vectors to transmit the virus to more susceptible people. Full vaccination opportunities have to include children.
Eligibility to receive the vaccine is not the same as opportunity to actually get it. There are a lot of logistical hurdles to overcome before we can really say all unvaccinated people are that way by choice. The first is obviously supply, which is increasing, but isn't there yet. The second is accessibility, which will take longer.
Finally, no vaccine is 100%. Even at 95% efficacy, that still means 1 person in 20 is susceptible. Vaccines are definitely a key component to getting us back to normalcy, but we need to pair them with other mitigation measures until the virus is under better control. Vaccines are not just individual protection, but are a public health strategy to get us to herd immunity that can offer a reasonable amount of protection to those who cannot be protected by a vaccine.