Possibly... But only if the road in question had Karl Marx on one side and Bernie Sanders on the other.
I'd agree redcafe is disproportionately on the left, although not the far left. But then what you define as far left is clearly defined by your own political orientation to begin with, it's not an objective description. There's a more vocal group of people who identify firmly as leftists that dominate many discussions, but they're a pretty small proportion of the overall contributors. They're just more involved for obvious reasons. Clearly most people are much closer to the centre than Bernie Sanders. Or perhaps your view of the centre is at odds with the current consensus in the real world.
What % of the UK population do you think share your political ideology?
AP, Reuters, CBS/NBC for news. Joe Rogan is good for hearing both sides because he's having people on from both sides from Bernie to Alex Jones and he is calling them out when needed to so usually it's a good listen.
Fair enough. I find it a little odd that you draw such a hard line between NBC and CNN personally, they both have a pretty clear bias from my perspective - at least how you're defining bias. Their most active contributors have a clearly defined set of values that are embedded in essentially all of their programming. And they've both been attacked by Trump for being fake news and the opposition party.
Don't you think Joe Rogan's talkshow is just a vehicle for libertarianism, the whole setup of it is embedded with a philosophy that establishes particular moral priorities, and his own voice always plays a strong part in the programming? So if that makes up a significant portion of your insight into arguments from both sides - as it does for many of his fans - then it will gradually frame all of your understanding of both sides through that libertarian lens, which by definition is the kind of bias you reject? Don't you think there's a reason why most of his fans share a similar political ideology to you?