I'd really like facts.
Sometimes my biases need a reality check.
Yes! Me too on both!
Wall Street Journal, as mentioned earlier, tends to be closest to ‘just the facts’ for their news articles. Op-ed usually presents opposing viewpoints side by side or on consecutive days in an attempt to let the reader decide for themselves.
Business articles there tend to be most neutral while political reporting tows the line between news and op-ed.
ETA: Sample paragraph from one of yesterday’s stories on the Capitol:
““The Capitol Police were unprepared for the sheer size of the protest,” said David Gomez, a retired FBI executive. Once the rioters barged into the Capitol, other federal law enforcement agencies were slow to respond, either out of deference to President Trump or because of a lack of experience with dealing with riots, which isn’t their primary mission, Mr. Gomez said. “Up until they breached the Capitol, the possibility existed that it was going to be a large protest that didn’t cross those barricades. Once they did that [law enforcement personnel] were overwhelmed and couldn’t respond quickly enough,” he said.”
Capitol Police Weren’t Prepared for Rioters, Authorities Say
Federal authorities planned to deal with protests this week with a minimally visible presence, according to law-enforcement officials, an approach which seemed to backfire when pro-Trump rioters breached the Capitol.
www.wsj.com