"Laws are silent in times of war."
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Iraq War veteran and former Marine scout-sniper Matter Victoriano on the internal struggles he and many other veterans face alongside the struggles with the ones they love.

Ron Capps discusses his memoir, Seriously Not All Right, which recounts his experience serving America as a soldier and civilian in five wars in ten years, his struggle with PTSD, and how he has coped and recovered.

Kayla Williams talks PTSD/TBI, veterans, and life and recovery in the aftermath of war in her new book, Plenty of Time When We Get Home.

The second of a two-part feature, Lt. Col. Douglas A. Pryer examines the effects of moral injury on military culture and military suicide.

Lt. Col. Douglas A. Pryer, looking back at classical literature and his own experience in Iraq, makes the case that "moral injury" better explains some psychological symptoms than PTSD. This is the first of a two-part essay.

Mike Matthews writes in a new book that "moral trauma" and PTSD are occupational hazards of combat, but that military personnel tend to be resilient. His research suggests that psychological wounds may be as medal-worthy as physical ones.