You can as a condition of school attendance and military service. Most states have some sort of exemption, but Mississippi and West Virginia have no exemptions except medical, and there's already bills percolating in various legislatures to repeal religious and philosophical exemptions based on the new measles outbreak.
Hopefully the repeal will be coming to your state soon.
So, in your mind the government can't search me, but they can inject me?
The government is not injecting you (unless you're in the military); it is your doctor. And only a condition of attending a taxpayer funded facility with the goal of not spreading infectious diseases, which, according to 100% of the medical evidence, is not inherently dangerous or unreasonable.
Good luck getting that through judicial review. In case you are unfamiliar with the above passage it is in the U.S. Constitution which trumps even Texas's state constitution. Just thought you should know, I didn't want you to come across as ignorant of the federal system again
There have been no judicial decisions that have struck down vaccine mandates in the various states, so I don't need any "luck". It's already the law.
Your kids are immune to infectious diseases because you vaccinated them. How are unvaccinated children a risk to vaccinated children??? Does someone else need to take a pill so your headache goes away too????
More proof that you don't know much about vaccines. Not only are they not foolproof, outbreaks start at places where unvaccinated people congregate. Unlike you, I'm concerned about all kids vaccinated and unvaccinated and think precautions can be taken to keep them as safe as possible from people like you who obviously don't care, and are admittedly fine with exposing kids to risk of disease.
I think you should be ashamed of yourself, and wonder how you sleep at night. You and your kids certainly wouldn't be allowed near mine.