With the presidential election season in full-swing, you're probably going to read a lot of poll results over the next 12 months.

Although most polls stick to political questions this time of year, some polling companies do sneak in a sports-related question or two and that's exactly what one company did during a recent survey.

In a poll taken between Oct. 1 and Oct. 4, Public Policy Polling asked 1,338 Americans, "Who do you think is the better quarterback: Tom Brady or Aaron Rodgers?"

Apparently, America is torn on the Brady or Rodgers question because the two quarterbacks came out almost exactly even. Thirty-four percent of America picked Rodgers as the better quarterback, while 32 percent of America picked Brady.

The other 34 percent of the country went with "Not sure," which means they probably wanted to pick Colin Kaepernick, but he wasn't an option. That's a joke, no one would've picked Kaepernick. 

Thanks to the margin of error in the poll, which was 2.7 percent, Brady can statistically say America thinks he's as good as Rodgers. 

By the way, since this was a political poll, there was a political element to the Brady-Rodgers question. 

Brady did best with people who label themselves as "very liberal," getting 38 percent of the votes there.

Rodgers did well with both sides of the political spectrum: The Packers quarterback got 40 percent of the vote from people who label themselves "somewhat liberal" and 40 percent from people who label themselves "somewhat conservative."

On the gender end, 31 percent of women said Rodgers was better compared to 27 percent for Brady (43 percent weren't sure). For males, 38 percent said Rodgers was better vs. 37 percent for Brady. 

There are certain segments of the population who think Brady is better. The Patriots quarterback did better with Hispanics (41 percent-27 percent), African-Americans (39-26) and people aged 18-29 (37-35). 

It's easy to see why America was torn: When the poll was taken after Week 3, both quarterbacks were 3-0 and were pretty even statistically. 

Brady was 96 of 133 for 1,112 yards with nine touchdowns and zero interceptions while Rodgers was 67 of 91 for 771 yards with 10 touchdowns and zero interceptions. 

Is Tom Brady a better quarterback than Aaron Rodgers? (USATSI)
Is Tom Brady a better quarterback than Aaron Rodgers? (USATSI)