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Statistics are shown for this demographic

Answer Overview

Response rates from 176 Rhinoceros voters.

15%
Yes
85%
No
15%
Yes
85%
No

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 176 Rhinoceros voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 176 Rhinoceros voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Rhinoceros voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @B46V7MRfrom Alberta  answered…4wks4W

No, and in the interest of minimizing tyranny, I advocate a referendum on jailing anyone who proposes or supports this. Better yet, I would voluntarily contribute to a crowdfunding effort to launch them all into the sun.

 @B2LYYGRfrom Nova Scotia  answered…3mos3MO

No, and it should be illegal to track any vehicle without its owner's consent.

 @9VGR4J9from British Columbia  answered…7mos7MO

I would say for anyone caught violating traffic regulations to begin with. If they prove over a few years they can be trusted remove it. Otherwise if its a repeat offender hit them with a table.

 @9T6K963from Ontario  answered…8mos8MO

They should enforce this practice on individuals reported for reckless driving or with a history of traffic tickets.

 @9SLJBJVfrom British Columbia  answered…8mos8MO

Yes, but also for safety reasons. How many vehicles go missing and are never found.

 @9RZPX67from Alberta  answered…9mos9MO

no this is a major invasion of privacy, any government that introduces this should be voted into the ground

 @B4SXKQ9from Alberta  answered…2 days2D

No, unless the driver is repeatedly breaking the law and driving dangerously - then they should have a probation period similar to DUI blow boxes

 @B4KJ9LBfrom Ontario  answered…2wks2W

In the case of frequent offenders, yes. It should be up to the individual owner of the vehicles for everyone else. There are situations where this kind of monitoring would be beneficial, like commercial vehicles for example.