Only 51 percent of Americans recognize the fact that global warming is already harming people in the U.S. right now.

There’s overwhelming agreement among climate scientists that the earth is getting hotter, and it’s due to human pollution greenhouse gases. Because the earth has been getting hotter for decades, people around the world are already suffering the consequences.

Just 100 emission-heavy corporations are responsible for 71 percent of greenhouse gas pollution. Without public consensus on the reality of climate change change, it’s nearly impossible to expect representatives elected by the public to appropriately regulate these corporations. Between 2008 and 2018, the the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and the George Mason Center for Climate Change Communication asked more than 22,000 people across the continental U.S., as well as Alaska and Hawaii, a series of “agree” or “disagree” questions regarding their attitudes about climate change.

Today, the groups released an interactive map illustrating their findings. While people seem to agree the world is getting hotter, they are blithely unaware we are the ones causing it and the resulting destruction. The U.S., a relatively-well-off nation (though with a large contingent of people already directly affected, remains somewhat selfishly aloof to this very serious problem, since economically vulnerable people of color are disproportionately more likely to suffer. For instance, Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico last summer, where almost half of all people lived in poverty before the hurricane hit.

Users can sort the findings based by county, metro area, Congressional district, and state, or select an option to see the national average. Warm colors like yellow and red indicate that more than half of people agreed with a statement, while shades of blue represent less than 50 percent agreement.