Then why have you been arguing for a higher standard of evidence about Jesus when you know it's impossible? Self-fulfilling prophecy? I don't get it.
Oh, it's by no means impossible to find a good enough standard of evidence for a real Jesus. Providing of course that he actually did exist, so that such genuine evidence was once, or still is, available.
And by a "higher standard" (which I don't think I have specifically raised as an issue in this thread, i.e. except in explanatory reply when you and others have asked me about that), I only mean a "higher standard" in comparison to what HJ-posters in the other threads were describing as actually far less evidence for other ancient historical figures who they point out as universally accepted, such as Pythagoras, Socrates, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, and even Kim Jong -il (do you remember that huge discussion over many pages from a member here who kept insisting that if we did not believe in Jesus on the evidence presented by bible scholars then we certainly should not believe in the Korean leader Kim Jong-il ... remember all that lengthy issue?).
What was argued in those other HJ threads was that we have enough evidence of all those other figures such that historians and everyone else do not to question the existence of those various figures (named above), hence they said that I should be satisfied with what they claimed was actually a great deal more evidence for a HJ.
What I said in response to that was, first of all (1) that it's not true that we actually have more evidence for Jesus than we have for those other named figures, and secondly (2) that if the actual existence of people like Pythagoras, Socrates, Julius Caesar, and Alexander the Great were as important to the daily lives of everyone on the planet as Jesus is today, where over 2 billion people around the world follow a belief system based upon the existence of any of those people, then we certainly would be asking for convincing evidence that they were at the very least real people and not just fictitious legends.
Though in addition to that (which I have pointed out many times in the various HJ threads) ; for people like Pythagoras, Socrates, Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great, what is important about them (important to historians, but really of zero practical importance to the daily lives of anyone today), is what was said to have been done in their names. Such as the founding of a philosophical movement called the "Pythagorean School" with it's explanation of Pythagoras Theorem, or in the case of Roman rulers like Caesar the various wars that were fought by his soldiers etc. ... and there is actually overwhelming evidence that all those things did happen. i.e. someone did form a school of Pythagorean philosophy and some Roman emperor did actually fight all those wars and have all those monuments built etc. So the evidence for that is actually enormous.
But Jesus is not like that at all. In his case it's his actual existence which is vital and which is the bedrock upon which today's worldwide Christianity is built. And that's the problem for an institution with a belief system as huge and hugely important as Christianity, because it turns out that there actually is no good or credible evidence of his existence at all.
So that's why people really should now (in the 21st century), be asking for some some sort of genuine convincing evidence to show that Jesus was a real person.
But instead what we have got is a church leadership that simply hand-waves the problem away and insists that nobody in their right mind could possibly doubt that Jesus was real. And a field of biblical studies that claims such a vast amount of evidence for Jesus that it amounts to a literal "certainty" that he was real ... but where, when the church and bible scholars are put on the spot and asked to actually produce that evidence, all that they produce is the biblical writing that simply amounts to evidence of peoples belief in a messiah that none of the biblical writers had ever known! That's evidence only of religious belief, it's not actually evidence of Jesus.
So that is the sense in which I have in the past quite often said that in fact we should demand better evidence for Jesus. "Better than" what my HJ opponents were calling far worse or far less evidence for their examples of Pythagoras, Socrates, Julius Caesar, Alexander the Great (or even Kim Jong-il). That is - if, as they all claimed, we actually have far less evidence for people like Pythagoras, then what I said was that certainly would not be good enough to accept Pythagoras either if he was today the basis of a worldwide belief system for over 2 billion people.