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Wounding Warriors: How Bad Policy Is Making Veterans Sicker and Poorer Hardcover – October 26, 2021
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According to General Jim Mattis, former US Secretary of Defense, Wounding Warriors is “an unflinching appraisal…a must-read for those committed to caring for our Veterans who have borne the battle.”
Indeed, Wounding Warriors: How Bad Policy Is Making Veterans Sicker and Poorer is a transformational effort of research into the Department of Veterans Affairs and the US military.
Authors Daniel Gade — retired US Army lieutenant colonel, professor, public policy leader, and former US Senate candidate from Virginia — and former Wall Street Journal Reporter Daniel Huang interviewed dozens of veterans who saw the perverse structure of incentives within the VA from the inside. The authors also combed through years of literature and compiled a wealth of data that demonstrates beyond all reasonable doubt that our system of caring for veterans, post-military, is broken.
As former US Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis said in his review of the book, it is “an unflinching appraisal” of how the Department of Veterans Affairs rewards disingenuity and dishonesty. Wounding Warriors, however, does more than identify flaws in how veterans are cared for after their time in service is up. It also outlines solutions that would move veterans to take a healthy approach to post-military life.
Wounding Warriors is a must-read for veterans, their families, and anyone who has felt subjected to a corrupt system of bad incentives.
- Print length381 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBallast Books
- Publication dateOctober 26, 2021
- Dimensions5.8 x 1.5 x 9.1 inches
- ISBN-101955026998
- ISBN-13978-1955026994
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"[Wounding Warriors] makes a compelling case for reform. Lincoln's immortal words in his second inaugural address, "To care for him who has borne the battle and for his widow, and his orphan" have served as a beacon, but today are shrouded in fog. It is time to bring the disability compensation program into the twenty-first century and not the century gone by. Reform is never easy, but veterans who have suffered the physical and mental wounds of war, their dependents, and the American people who support this critically important program deserve no less."
-Anthony Principi, 4th Secretary of Veterans Affairs
"[Wounding Warriors shows that] the current system promotes waste and abuse not only of VA disability payments but of unnecessary medical appointments. It would almost be better to give soldiers a piece of paper that asks, "Are you willing to lie, cheat, and/or steal to receive 100 percent disability?" and if they check yes, just give them 100 percent because it will free up waste from unnecessary imaging, behavioral health, sleep studies, etc."
-MAJ [Name Withheld], PT, DPT, MHA, MBA; US Army
"A vitally important book, written by someone uniquely qualified to tell the story. Reaching all the way back to the post-World War II era (when five-star General Omar Bradley -- one of the great leaders of that war -- led a commission that identified the "perverse incentive structure" that continues in our current VA disability system), this book shows us how 'the path of care and compensation' has led to a 'quagmire of despair and dysfunction.'
"Astoundingly well documented, with a clarion call for action and clear-cut recommendations, Wounding Warriors shows us the road home from dysfunction and despair. This book can transform the way we care for our veterans, from the current methodology that has done great harm, to policies that will give our veterans the care they deserve.
If our nation sincerely cares about our veterans, we will read and heed this book."
-Lt. Col. Dave Grossman, author of On Combat, On Killing, and On Spiritual Combat
"America's veterans, including the most seriously wounded, ill, and injured, have become the latest battleground in a long-standing political war. The political left and right both trip over themselves to 'honor veterans, ' not ever considering that their efforts may be misguided or even harmful to those they aim to help. In this bold, groundbreaking new book, Daniel Gade exposes flaws in the disability system that make America's veterans poorer and sicker. This book will be controversial, and it should be read by anyone who seeks to understand the veteran landscape in America."
-Col (Ret.) Jack Jacobs, US Army, Medal of Honor Recipient and Author of If Not Now, When? Duty and Sacrifice In America's Time of Need and Basic: Surviving Boot Camp and Basic Training
"As a US Army veteran and former Secretary of Veterans Affairs, I find this book to be a breath of fresh air. In Wounding Warriors, Daniel Gade, himself a wounded warrior, dissects and critiques some of the serious issues that beset our nation's worthy attempts to care for our wounded, ill, and injured service members and veterans. His credibility is ironclad and his argument is stunning: in attempting to care for veterans, our disability system creates incentives that make them sicker, poorer, and worse off. This is a must-read for policy makers and anyone involved in care for veterans, as well as for veterans and their families."
-Jim Nicholson, 5th Secretary of Veterans Affairs
"Daniel Gade's real education came after losing his leg fighting in Iraq. The most disturbing lesson paradoxically came from the agency that was supposed to help put him back together. What Gade discovered both through his own experiences and extensive research of others' is this: rather than assisting warriors in returning to productive lives, the Veterans Administration encourages fraud and rewards indolence, further marginalizing these men and women and robbing the nation of their potentially robust contributions and continued service post-war. These meticulously researched findings set to compelling human narratives won't make Gade very popular. But they represent the brave effort and convincing factual evidence necessary for the hard work of systemic change when the system is broken."
-Kevin Sites, author of Swimming with Warlords
"I found myself re-reading parts of this book as they strike so deep. [The authors captured] the reality of soldiering as well as anything I've read. This book accurately describes a broken and spectacularly failing VA system, and will make plenty of people squeamish. Between popular culture, wishful thinking, and an untamable bureaucracy, I'm afraid that the only real solution is to blow the whole system up and start over."
-Matt Eversmann, Army Ranger (Ret.) and Author of The Battle of Mogadishu: Firsthand Accounts from the Men of Task Force Ranger
"This revelatory, lens-changing book shows why our VA, though staffed by devoted and capable medical professionals, must change. Institutions get the behavior they reward. Seen through the experience of a clear-eyed, seriously wounded warrior, the current system's design and application guides vets coming in with no intent of becoming wards of the state into that very situation. Those with serious problems are submerged in a sea of others who are rewarded for staying in an unimproved situation. In Wounding Warriors, Daniel Gade has made an unflinching appraisal and charted a refreshing path forward for making the VA best in class. A must-read for those committed to caring for our veterans who have borne the battle."
-General (ret.) Jim Mattis, US Marine Corps (Ret), Former US Secretary of Defense
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Ballast Books
- Publication date : October 26, 2021
- Language : English
- Print length : 381 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1955026998
- ISBN-13 : 978-1955026994
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.8 x 1.5 x 9.1 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,068,657 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #243 in Military Policy (Books)
- #399 in Government & Business
- #601 in Political Corruption & Misconduct
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

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Daniel Gade was born and raised in Minot, North Dakota. He enlisted in the Army in 1992 and deployed to Operation Iraqi Freedom as a company commander in August 2004. He was wounded by enemy fire twice and decorated for valor; the second wounding resulted in the amputation of his entire right leg. After retiring from the Army as a Lieutenant Colonel in 2017, he accepted a political appointment as a Senior Advisor at the US Department of Labor’s Veterans Employment and Training Service (VETS). In 2019, he ran unsuccessfully for United States Senate in Virginia, but garnered more votes than any Republican candidate in Virginia history. Daniel’s military awards and decorations include the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star, two Purple Hearts, the Combat Action Badge, Ranger Tab, Presidential Service Badge, and both Airborne and Air Assault wings. He and his family reside in Mount Vernon, Virginia.

Daniel Huang is an independent journalist and former Wall Street Journal reporter.
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Customers find the book's narrative engaging, with one review highlighting its many wonderful anecdotes. The pacing receives mixed reactions from customers.
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Customers appreciate the narrative of the book, with one describing it as engaging and filled with wonderful anecdotes, while another notes its fascinating history.
"...they have leveraged their considerable experience and talents to write an engaging book on a complex public policy topic and hot-button issue...." Read more
"...The book is compelling with many wonderful anecdotes. We are introduced to the lives of many who enlist and what happened to them...." Read more
"...Nothing could be further from the truth. The narrative is so clear that even my college son (who never served in the military) listened to a portion..." Read more
"...into an engaging narrative. Every taxpayer should consider reading it...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it provocative and eye-opening, while others describe it as contrived and filled with spurious assertions.
"...candid about the problems in the current VA system, the authors strike a provocative balance...." Read more
"...That’s just my opinion. I could go on about the myriad spurious assertions and misguided, indeed intentionally deceptive, objective of..." Read more
"Bold, provocative and brutally honest assessment of our current disability programs...." Read more
"Not a poorly written book, but perceptibly not entirely honest either......." Read more
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Unvarnished and compassionate appraisal
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2021Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseEveryone who cares about the welfare of our military veterans should read Wounding Warriors. This newly-published book tells how one arm of the Veterans Administration (VA), the disability system, disincentivizes injured and ill veterans to recover from their service-connected injuries and illnesses, while the other arm, the healthcare system fails to care properly for their needs. The result is a massive, largely ineffective government agency that costs billions of dollars and does not help military veterans in ways that the American public would want – to take care of the sick and injured and to help all veterans to transition successfully to productive lives after their military service. I think that Messrs. Daniel Gade, PhD and Daniel Huang have written an in-depth appraisal of the Veterans Administration that should transcend politics and lead Congress to reform the broken system of care for our military veterans.
Dr. Gade is a decorated Army veteran and a wounded warrior, and he is well-qualified to write about the Veterans Administration. He is an amputee who lost a leg in Iraq when the enemy hit his vehicle with an IED. After recovering from his injuries, he earned a PhD in public administration and policy and served as a senior advisor in the Department of Labor’s Veterans Employment and Training Service. Mr. Huang is an investigative reporter, covering veterans’ issues for the Wall Street Journal. Together, I think that they have leveraged their considerable experience and talents to write an engaging book on a complex public policy topic and hot-button issue.
What makes Wounding Warriors so engaging is the stories of the veterans Messrs. Gade and Huang profile throughout the book as these men and women transition from military service to civilian life. Some of these men and women go on to thrive in the private sector, while others get caught up in the veterans’ disability system and fail to use their capabilities to build better lives for themselves and their families. The authors also cite many academic studies that have been written about the shortcomings the VA’s disability qualification process, as well as how disabilities are rated. Essentially, I came to understand that that the VA has expanded the disability system to include all kinds of maladies and to compensate veterans liberally for many things that people widely suffer from and deal with as a matter of course. These maladies might or might not be service-connected. I think that one argument of the authors is that these conditions often are medically treatable, regardless of their causes. The VA’s disability system considers such maladies as permanent disabilities (meaning reduced capacity to perform work) and fails to provide effective medical treatment options in many cases.
Messrs. Gade and Huang end their book by offering three principles to guide the reform of the VA’s broken system so that it can better achieve the intended goals of the American public. For example, the first principle reads “the goal of any system of veterans benefits and care should be to return the veteran as closely as possible to the life situation in which he would have found himself but for the service rendered.” In other words, treat each veteran as the unique individual he or she is. Avoid treating veterans with the “one size fits all” approach inherent in the VA’s disability system.
In celebration of Veterans Day 2021, I hope that more people will read Wounding Warriors and press our representatives in Congress for needed reforms in veterans’ care.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2023Format: KindleVerified PurchaseLieutenant Colonel, Dr. Daniel Gade is a friend whom I served with in Korea before his deployment from Freedom’s Frontier to the Sands of Ramadi. Let me first say that Daniel is a true servant leader who has sacrificed much for our beloved country. We owe him (and he dear wife Wendy) a debt of gratitude that cannot be measured in VA benefits, retirement pay, praise, or accolades. I sat on the couch with Daniel before he deployed and discussed his hopes, concerns, and fears. I remember the phone calls circulating both times he was wounded- we prayed for his safety and recovery and feared the worst. I was overjoyed that his angels and so many of our brave medical care professionals from battlefield trauma care, to Landstuhl, to Walter Reed, were able to bring him back to us. Many cannot fathom the miracle of his survival and many cannot appreciate what he was able to accomplish and is still accomplishing by the grace of God following his horrible wounds. He is an example to us all about duty, faith, and resilience. Many of us carry wounds that are not so evident as Daniels. Many of these hidden wounds, lurking beneath the surface, continue to take the lives of our combat veterans.
Lt Col Gade, and his co-author Daniel Huang poured their hearts into researching how the very system chartered with caring for both the gravely or acutely wounded and those with hidden wounds contributes to worsening their trauma. Many of us know of Veterans who have very little combat, gray zone, or stress related mental or physical wounds that receive a disproportionate compensation than those who suffer from acute trauma. On the other hand, we all know of those who never seek help because they want to be strong. They do not want to be seen as a malingerer, a victim, or as a fraud. Many of these are taking their lives because of the ghosts that haunt them. While being straightforward, and candid about the problems in the current VA system, the authors strike a provocative balance. If you can get past your own biases (and I have mine), you can see both the compassion for our wounded Warriors and see the value in this unvarnished appraisal. I am proud of them for having taken on such an important and politically charged task. This work must inform future Veteran’s care policy. There are few more qualified to lead this important discussion than Lt Col Gade. I recommend it to you without reservation. Colonel R.E. McGuire, USA.
5.0 out of 5 starsLieutenant Colonel, Dr. Daniel Gade is a friend whom I served with in Korea before his deployment from Freedom’s Frontier to the Sands of Ramadi. Let me first say that Daniel is a true servant leader who has sacrificed much for our beloved country. We owe him (and he dear wife Wendy) a debt of gratitude that cannot be measured in VA benefits, retirement pay, praise, or accolades. I sat on the couch with Daniel before he deployed and discussed his hopes, concerns, and fears. I remember the phone calls circulating both times he was wounded- we prayed for his safety and recovery and feared the worst. I was overjoyed that his angels and so many of our brave medical care professionals from battlefield trauma care, to Landstuhl, to Walter Reed, were able to bring him back to us. Many cannot fathom the miracle of his survival and many cannot appreciate what he was able to accomplish and is still accomplishing by the grace of God following his horrible wounds. He is an example to us all about duty, faith, and resilience. Many of us carry wounds that are not so evident as Daniels. Many of these hidden wounds, lurking beneath the surface, continue to take the lives of our combat veterans.Unvarnished and compassionate appraisal
Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2023
Lt Col Gade, and his co-author Daniel Huang poured their hearts into researching how the very system chartered with caring for both the gravely or acutely wounded and those with hidden wounds contributes to worsening their trauma. Many of us know of Veterans who have very little combat, gray zone, or stress related mental or physical wounds that receive a disproportionate compensation than those who suffer from acute trauma. On the other hand, we all know of those who never seek help because they want to be strong. They do not want to be seen as a malingerer, a victim, or as a fraud. Many of these are taking their lives because of the ghosts that haunt them. While being straightforward, and candid about the problems in the current VA system, the authors strike a provocative balance. If you can get past your own biases (and I have mine), you can see both the compassion for our wounded Warriors and see the value in this unvarnished appraisal. I am proud of them for having taken on such an important and politically charged task. This work must inform future Veteran’s care policy. There are few more qualified to lead this important discussion than Lt Col Gade. I recommend it to you without reservation. Colonel R.E. McGuire, USA.
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2022Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseIf you are a veteran, read this book. If you are a healthcare provider, read this book. In leadership, management, policy development, politics - read this book.
Surprisingly it hits on every single concern we (as healthcare consumers, tax payers) should be in tune to. As a veteran, I understand the system is abused and wrongfully so. The "entitlement" post-service is detrimental, clogging the system for those in dire need, extending wait times. I think Dr. Gade hits it spot on. The VA is afraid to call those who overuse and abuse the system for their own personal benefit and gain because of the potential backlash, but when you read that 3x the amount of compensation and pension is being spent compared to healthcare utilization - its just terrible.
This hits on every public health and policy topic imaginable. Highly recommend this book.
5.0 out of 5 starsIf you are a veteran, read this book. If you are a healthcare provider, read this book. In leadership, management, policy development, politics - read this book.What everyone thinks, but no one will say!
Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2022
Surprisingly it hits on every single concern we (as healthcare consumers, tax payers) should be in tune to. As a veteran, I understand the system is abused and wrongfully so. The "entitlement" post-service is detrimental, clogging the system for those in dire need, extending wait times. I think Dr. Gade hits it spot on. The VA is afraid to call those who overuse and abuse the system for their own personal benefit and gain because of the potential backlash, but when you read that 3x the amount of compensation and pension is being spent compared to healthcare utilization - its just terrible.
This hits on every public health and policy topic imaginable. Highly recommend this book.
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