With creepy clown sightings popping up more and more every day, the Insane Clown Posse, of course, has been asked its opinion on the bizarre encounters.

The creepy sightings have hit Michigan and nearly 20 other states, but the pair of Metro Detroit-based performers known as the Insane Clown Posse don't seem to be buying that there's an actual threat.

They noted a recent Rolling Stone article on the group's Facebook page, claiming it "is basically nothing more than mass hysteria and moral panic."

"Believe it or not, the same thing happened in 1981, too, LONG before social media, Stephen King wrote 'It' and ICP were in f***** GRADE SCHOOL at the time!

"So there ARE no 'killer clowns' -- it's just jackasses being jackasses. So everyone relax!"

The post, signed by "J-Webb," can be read in its explicit entirety by clicking here.

Reports have been growing in Michigan, with a clown being sighted in Metro Detroit on Sunday, Oct. 2, Northern Michigan and even an incident in Muskegon that forced a school into a soft lockdown.

New York Police Department's Intelligence and Counterterrorism Deputy Commissioner John Miller said his department is tracking the issue but doesn't "see any real threat here."

"We have tried to avoid falling into the trap of putting extra police protection or presence in places where we've had these," he said Monday, CBS reports. "Our main message is don't believe the hype and don't be afraid of the clowns."

CNN posted an in-depth dive into the spike in clown sightings Monday morning. In the report, which reports a similar string of events occurred in the greater Boston area in the 1980s.

"Loren Coleman, a cryptozoologist who studies the folklore behind mythical beasts such as Bigfoot and the Loch Ness Monster, came up with something called "The Phantom Clown Theory," which attributes the proliferation of clown sightings to mass hysteria," the article reads. "It's impossible to determine which of these incidents are hoaxes and which are bona fide tales of clowning around taken to the extreme."