So you are denying that the vast majority of historians and so-called experts agree that there probably was an historical Jesus ?
Which Jesus? The messianic king, the progressive Pharisee, the Galilean shaman, the magus, the Hellenistic sage, Buddhist teacher, or trapped spaceman? All in all seriousness have been suggested at one time or another.
As Price said in
Christ a Fiction:
"The "historical Jesus" reconstructed by New Testament scholars is always a reflection of the individual scholars who reconstruct him. Albert Schweitzer was perhaps the single exception, and he made it painfully clear that previous questers for the historical Jesus had merely drawn self-portraits.
All unconsciously used the historical Jesus as a ventriloquist dummy. Jesus must have taught the truth, and their own beliefs must have been true, so Jesus must have taught those beliefs."
I haven't seen that. Perhaps you could give examples.
Already gave some:
The "evidence" for Jesus has been used to "sell absurd theories to idiots"
Theories like a census that require people to return to their ancestor's place of residence
Theories like commanders who are such wonderful multitaskers that they can run a a census while fighting a war...two Roman provinces to the east.
Theories that try to explain why nobody recorded a three hour eclipse.
And speaking of no body how about the theories of the undead jamboree of Matthew 27:52-53 that no one else saw?
Then there the Misrepresentations like Pliny the Younger writing about Jesus (he doesn't), the 5000 Greek manuscripts (over 14 freaking centuries), Suetonius talking about Jesus (he doesn't), and the list goes on and on.
On the other hand I see MJ-supporters constantly adapting their hypothesis with additional speculation in order to make it fit known facts.
Facts or misrepresentation of facts? Like going to the Egyptian Book of the Dead as to way the Isis the virgin theory is wrong when no one could even read hieroglyphs since before the time of Alexander the Great? All the while ignoring things like
The Golden Ass where Isis is said to be called by various other names including Diana, Minerva, and Hecate...all of whom in Greek mythology were virgin goddess.
"In the most remote age it appears that Osiris, Isis, Horus, and Set were all independent and unconnected deities, belonging probably to different tribes.
Isis was a virgin goddess at Buto in the Delta, Horus came to be worshiped with her,..." (Progress (1897) - Volume 3 - University Association Page 382)
Then you have the idea that being born of a virgin was the ancient equivalent of being born with a silver spoon in one's mouth ie signifying the "extraordinary personal qualities exhibited by an individual" and never meant to be taken literally.
Let's not go there. Any time someone mentions Einstein to support their claim, it ends up badly.
No it doesn't. In fact, Einstein is a perfect example of the Miner effect.