That seems a bit contradictory, right? Facts don't have an ideological bias, opinions do though.
The danger with any of this stuff these days is falling into a pattern of
Confirmation Bias, which is something we all do to a degree because it's one of the many natural cognitive biases most are unaware of. These days with the 24 hour news cycle it's really easy to just listen to what you want to hear - just pick a slanted source and ignore the ones that contradict it. Confirmation Bias is a kind of selective thinking that applies merit or validity based on agreement with a personal narrative, not actual reality. This is how you can have such a sizeable chunk of a population so deeply deluded and mislead, even when facts and reality tell them otherwise.
The problem is that it takes education, awareness and effort to not fool ourselves with our own biases. And we fool ourselves better than anyone else, often seeking comfort instead of facing reality. This is precisely why Critical Thinking and understanding cognitive biases is a foundational part of scientific disciplines.
These days, you pretty much have to be very selective about news sources, scoop up lots of info from them, then try to weigh the validity based on evidence and not based on what you'd like to hear. Sometimes the truth hurts, doesn't it fatso?