What a shoddy and disingenuous little tap-dance that was.
Actually, you've really caused me to waste about two hours of my time this evening with that silly little cut and paste you pulled. I had to go back through my seminary books and try to figure out where the gaps in my education were. What you fail to mention in any of your "research" is that these types of textual criticisms have a variety of names, depending on who you are reading. Alexandrian has been called the "Neutral criticism" by Wescott-Hort and "Eastern" criticism by others, Byzantian text is also called the "Koine" text, which is what I called it and this is the currently accepted canon, which is also what I called it and the "Western" text is mostly disputed and questioned to have ever existed in the first place.
So what you basically have is a handful of texual critics arguing over even what to call it, and what it is. I have read Metzger whom the web site you've cut from basis the outline. Granted, that was over 10 years ago for me. What I did come away with in my education is a Metzger edited Greek New Testament which I can read and analyze. This same source for your nice cut and pace, rates every passage in the following ways:
1) The evaluation of the evidence for the text (rated A-D). A = virtually certain; B=some doubt, etc. This grade is given on a variety of factors including how many other variants there are, whether they are obvious errors in copy only, and whether some intentional rewording seems to have taken place.
2) The Manuscript Evidence, ie. what source did it come from, where was it found, is it a special miniscule, what family does it belong to [here is your Alexandrian, Byzantine, Western question. Please note how embedded it is], what is it's believed date, how solid is the lectionary evidence, etc.) And by the way there are over 3,000 parchaments #'d and labeled in my margins by the editors-- unlike the 414 parchament attempt by von Soden.
3) Evidence from ancient versions. An analysis of Vulgate, Syraic, Coptic, etc. copies of the NT (there are over 100 different languages prior to the 4th century BTW.
4) Evidence of the Church Fathers. ie. Who quoted the text, how early was it quoted, etc.
Not that I actually plan on spending the time, but what exactly is it you want to know? I claim that the text speaks to a historical Jesus and you say that it doesn't right?
The text has evidence in it of an early dating at numerous points. The text also has portions which seem to be tampered with, I've not disputed that, but I fail to see (as does every textual critic) where anything "major" has been fabricated. In fact, since you seem bent on researching this harder than me, I challenge you to go find us all a textual critic who asserts there has been an obvious and "major" fabrication in the NT.
Perhaps you know of verse or passage, or can go find one, that is clearly fabricated and we can debate that one together? You use your sources and I will use mine.
Flick