Veterans are more likely than most to kill themselves with guns. Families want to keep them safe.

Barbie Rohde’s fingernail is decorated to represent Mission 22, the nonprofit she volunteers for that is focused on ending military and veteran suicide, on Friday, June 9, 2023, at her home in Flint, Texas. Thousands of service members and veterans take their own lives every year, including her 25-year-old son, Army Sgt. Cody Bowman. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

FLINT, Texas (AP) — She leaned out of the tent at a small-town summer festival, hoping someone would stop to ask about her tattoos, her T-shirt, the framed pictures of her son on a table in the back of the booth.

Barbie Rohde has made herself a walking billboard for this cause. She feels called to say the words, as much as they sometimes rattle the people who stop at her booth: “veteran suicide.â€

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