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Internet Buzzing Over Presumed Radiation Spike

Recently, many internet forums have been talking quite a bit about a presumed "cover-up" by the government of radiation levels spiking due to some unexplained occurrence that happened a few days ago near the Indiana and Michigan borders.



An incident near the borders of Indiana and Michigan in an area that is owned by the DOD has raised some eyebrows, especially where Internet forum operators have been concerned. They believe that something has happened, and nobody is talking about it except them.

One user on reddit.com provided a long list of information about the recent and incredibly spike in radiation levels and a reading that was retracted and called a "false alarm" by the EPA.

According to the user, a few days ago, a story was posted about radiation levels being between 2,000 and 7,000 CPM. The story was removed quickly, which sparked the user to do his own research on the situation. Anyone he contacted claimed that the reading was a malfunction of a detector and a false alarm, stating that he had nothing to worry about.

He discovered footage and reports of a strange event in the area that was not disclosed, but there is no report of the event occurring at all, and the footage is nonexistent at this point. Nonetheless, since then, according to the user, the radiation levels have been incredibly high, which is a potential danger about which the area residents should know.

The user has decided to raise awareness about the issue because a private radiation detector made the discovery, but the EPA-controlled detector corrected the issue, and none of the events he assumes to be related have been explained. He claims a government coverup, as many on the forum and other forums do as well after the incident.

According to the user, the normal radiation levels should always be between 5 and 60, and anything over 100 should always be reported. He believes the levels to have been dangerous, so public awareness is necessary in order to protect the general welfare.

Even though the user and forum have provided a lot of support for their concerns, much of the information used to back up their arguments is either anecdotal, brief, or nonexistent. Videos, articles and other information are not online at all and the only backing proof is screen shots from ther user showing the spikes that happened and when they happened.

This information has been thus far not noticed by the EPA, who still holds that the reading was a false alarm by a broken detector that has since been dealt with.

Still, the user and many on that forum and others as well have stuck to their stories, firmly believing that the spike did in fact occur, and it was linked to a situation that occurred days before in the area.

With the recent reports of zombie attacks, now is the biggest time to worry about the possible effects of a nuclear radiation leak.
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