For roughly sixty living Medal of Honor recipients, the House vote is more than symbolism; it is overdue recognition that courage does not always translate into comfort. Many of these men and women still crisscross the country, visiting schools, veteran halls, and small-town auditoriums, telling stories that most Americans could not bear to live, much less relive. Until now, they often paid their own way to keep those memories alive for the rest of us. A pension increase from $16,880 to $67,500 would not make them rich. It would simply mean that the cost of their sacrifice is not still quietly deducted from their retirement years.
Yet this decision does not exist in a vacuum. The money will come from within the Veterans’ Affairs budget, shifting resources and extending limitations for others who served but did not receive the nation’s highest honor. As the National Medal of Honor Museum prepares to open in Arlington, Texas, the country is confronted with a stark truth: honoring a few extraordinary heroes must not become an excuse to forget the many. The story of Maj. James Capers—wounded, bleeding, still leading his men through a jungle ambush in 1967—embodies what the medal means. The challenge now is to ensure the laws we pass reflect that same unwavering loyalty, not just in marble and glass, but in the quiet ledgers that govern how we care for every veteran who once wore the uniform.