Medal of Honor recipients are finally receiving a long-overdue financial increase, and it happened with almost no public drama. In a rare show of unity, the House voted 424–0 to quadruple their annual pension, signaling broad agreement on an issue often overlooked.
The raise will lift the pension to $67,500 a year. For once, Congress did not argue over partisan lines or fiscal priorities. Instead, lawmakers quietly acknowledged that the previous amount had been far too low for decades.
Behind the applause lies a sobering reality. Only about sixty Medal of Honor recipients are still living, and each carries a lifetime of memories, trauma, and responsibility tied to acts of extraordinary courage. Their service did not end when the war did.
These men are repeatedly asked to relive the worst days of their lives—speaking at events, educating the public, and embodying national ideals—often at personal emotional cost. In many cases, they have borne that burden largely on their own.
The pension increase feels less like a reward and more like a late admission. It reflects the nation’s reliance on these individuals to preserve the truth about war and sacrifice, even when that truth is uncomfortable.
Still, money cannot fully measure what was given. The story of Maj. James Capers, who has waited years for the Medal of Honor itself, highlights the gap between public praise and institutional follow-through.
Capers risked his life so others could live, yet still watches lawmakers debate recognition and value. His case underscores how unevenly honor and support can be delivered.
The raise is meaningful and necessary. But it also serves as a reminder that while pensions can be adjusted, the cost of sacrifice—and the wounds left behind—remain beyond calculation.