Under those conditions, of course an attorney will take your case. They stand to make $6,000 and the most likely scenario is you will not even go to trial because the defense attorneys will unravel your case during the discovery phase.No, and that's the trick. I risk equivalent of 6-7k USD in case of loss which is 10% of potential compensation the lawyer thinks we can claim. I don't think I'm ready to take such risk with 50% chances, it's easier to play roulette and bet on Red.
Much of your frustration is that you were unaware that tinnitus was a possible risk of loud noise exposure.I agree with your point to some extent @Bobbie7 , still it sounds like you're fine with unaware people being deafened, which I'm not ok with. True most people that go to events like concert expect it to be loud, but usually they don't understand the consequences because nobody told them what T is and nothing can be done. I suppose 90% od TT members who acquired T at loud event never heard a T word before (at least this is the case on Polish T forum where I belong). People should be informed about possible consequencies be the event organizer, that's my point of view. Whether it's possible to win a case against them is a secondary problem, primary is luck of awareness among people what is the risk. Or perhaps in States where you're from awareness about T is on a better level; in Poland usually people don't know what it is unless they have it. So in general my posts refer more to the situation in my country.
But who's fault is that? Is it the concert venue? Perhaps they assumed you knew of the link between tinnitus and hearing damage.
Or maybe a medical professional should have warned you at some point in your life. I know during my own annual physicals my doctors have covered a wide range of potential health risks, yet I do not recall anyone ever mentioning tinnitus. Then again, doctors do not warn us about every possible risk in life.
What about parents? We live in a society that's often quick to blame parents. But it's likely your parents were unaware of the condition, too. And how were they to know you would one day go to a concert and get tinnitus while others would go to the exact same concert and not get tinnitus?
So whose fault is it? Or is this perhaps an unfortunate accident and no one source is fully responsible or negligent?