Hope,
Nope. The "original issue" is what you decided it would be in your OP. Here in fact:
Has anyone read this book by a former atheist homicide detective (James Warner Wallace) who used the same methodology on the gospels as on a number of other 'cold' cases. In the course of this process, initiated in order to disprove the basis of Christianity once and for all, he became convinced of its validity. He even points out that the 'contradictions' match what you would expect to find from witnesses in any such case.
It is interesting how you have chosen to decide what was my thinking behind the OP, blue If anything, my point was encapsulated in the sentences that follow the one you have highlighted. That said, since it was meant to start a debate - which it has done - I'm not sure that I had any particular 'issue' in mind. It is you who have picked up on a particular sentence, not me.
Note that "who used the same methodology on the gospels as on a number of other 'cold' cases". I replied about that "original issue" to the effect that in that case he was committing a category error.
But I have yyet to see any evidence in support of that claim, blue. As it stands, its just your opinion.
Vlad then replied to me by name and quoted what I'd said about this "original issue" and expressed his opinion that Wallace had begun "all that" - ie, my point to which he was replying - before his conversion.
If the Wiki article is to believed Vlad was wrong about that, and I explained why.
And I subsequently pointed out that a reasonable reading of the English language used in the article would suggests that Vlad was correct, not you.
Subsequently there was discussion about the article also referring to his conversion before unspecified "investigations", but that wasn't your original issue, it wasn't the issue I commented on, and it wasn't the relevant part when Vlad went off the rails when he referred to my post and mistakenly said that its contents concerned something Wallace had done before his conversion.
I think the problem is your assertion that - despite what the article says - Wallace made his investigations post-conversion, when the article makes it pretty clear that they came before the conversion.
As for your original point, what we have is someone who apparently is already a committed Christian deciding to apply his policing experience of cold cases and finding that it confirms (or doesn't disconfirm) the faith position he held anyway.
And I pointed out that the only 'faith position' it could confirm or otherwise was - at the time of the investigations - his atheism.
There are lots of problems with that, not least the risk of confirmation bias and the fact that the objections to the resurrection story being true are many and various - that the Chinese whispers effect may have corrupted the consistency of the subsequent narratives is the least of it.
When one sets out to prove that X is a pack of untruths, only to find that one's investigations suggest the opposite, I'm not sure that that can be deemed to be confirmation bias. On the other hand, your insistence that the timeline is different to that indicated in the wiki doers smack of confoirmation bias.
As for " ... the fact that the objections to the resurrection story being true are many and various ... ", I'm afraid that this can be argued about just about anything if one is determined enough to do so. It doesn't mean that one's argument is correct.