Time to let the other shoe drop on this OP.
A few of the mythers do get the distinction between the entirely human Jesus of Nazareth and the magic man called Christ. But they often pretend that it doesn't exist and that Jesus of Nazareth and the Christ are one and the same in order purely to confuse. Keep in mind that they are not real scholars in that they are out to frame the data around an a priori point of view rather than arrive at a point of view through examining all the data first. The latter is what an honest scholar does. The former is what a propagandist does and is what many a myther does. In fact, the former is very much like the judge in Alice In Wonderland, who announces "Verdict first, evidence afterwards".
It's time to let readers know what I was after in the OP.
I had cited the following remarks from an apparent myther I had encountered on the Web --
"There are earlier references, but they aren't any good. They either just repeat what Christians were telling them -- Christians who were just riffing on the New Testament -- or they're actually fabricated by Christians themselves and the most famous example is a whole paragraph in the early Jewish historian, Josephus, which nearly everybody agrees was snuck into that book by a later Christian scribe, who was evidently annoyed that Josephus forgot to mention Jesus, so when he copied the book out he made sure to -- you know -- just add a paragraph. You generally don't have to add paragraphs to other people's history books for a guy who actually existed. Pretty much if you're inserting a guy into history who wasn't there before, usually that means he really wasn't there before. Now that leaves us just with the New Testament..."
Please note what this lecturer is doing. He strongly implies that the extant text of Josephus's Antiquities only provides one mention of Jesus of Nazareth, not two! That is the plain implication in "a later Christian scribe, who was evidently annoyed that Josephus forgot to mention Jesus". Forgot to mention Jesus of Nazareth? Even if we take one of Josephus's TWO mentions of Jesus of Nazareth as interpolated -- the myther's favorite fall-back position -- this lecturer is still referencing only one of the two mentions as being scribally interpolated, not both. How sloppy -- or sneaky. This lecturer plainly references this meddling scribe only in connection with a "paragraph", which clearly points to the mention of Jesus of Nazareth in Antiquities 18 only, since the other one, in Antiquities 20, is a sentence, not a paragraph. The lecturer is strongly implying here that in the absence of his scribally interpolated mention in Antiquities 18, no further mention of Jesus of Nazareth exists in the extant text of Antiquities at all! How sloppy this lecturer is, at best, and at worst, what a bald-faced liar. What this lecturer strongly implies as a result is simply and manifestly wrong. There IS another mention of Jesus of Nazareth in Antiqs., and it's in the form of a sentence, not a paragraph, and it's in Antiq. 20, not Antiq. 18.
Now the mention in Antiq. 18 has already occasioned some general doubts among peer-reviewed surveys, due to certain turns of phrase that seem rather unlike Josephus. Josephus's other Jesus mention in Antiq. 20 has not occasioned the same kind of peer-reviewed doubts at all, and how suspiciously convenient that our lecturer here completely ignores this second mention entirely -- in fact, seems to imply that the second mention in Antiq. 20 doesn't even exist in the extant text of Antiqs. at all! How very, very, VERY convenient -- and seemingly deliberate -- for our lecturer to imply so strongly that the only Jesus mention in Josephus is the one -- in Antiq. 18 -- for which there are already some peer-reviewed doubts! To seem to pretend that the less questioned Antiq. 20 doesn't even exist is highly misleading at best. I wanted to see if anyone would spot that. No one here did.
Ironically, though, I did encounter privately one poster, a myther, who ended up doing something quite similar! So I called him on it. And he replied "The reference in Book 20 is so obviously an interpolation and certainly not about Jesus, I didn't even think of it." I have no reason to believe he's not being entirely candid here. Mythers like him and the lecturer I reference here have gotten so used to assuming that their bizarre opinions are fact that they sometimes don't think twice in coming out with their more absurd statements.
It's time to identify the lecturer I was referencing. It was Richard Carrier in a video'd lecture at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pX4LvKvIWJw. The remarks I quote come at 01:48 - 2:31.
Operacast