I'll stick on my 'thousands (fify- I'm talking about the people who witnessed Jesus's miracles) of people can't be wrong' and I think that might beat homeopathy market stats, although you never know.
Except that:
a) we know that eye-witness accounts not only can be wrong, but very often are;
b) very few, if any, of the accounts we have are directly from eye-witnesses, they are at least second hand, if not further removed;
c) those accounts were all written a considerable period after the alleged events, when time has also had a deleterious effect on the accuracy of memory; and
d) those accounts have subsequently been deliberately edited and selectively interpreted through multiple languages into cultural realms without the underlying concepts of the original.
So we have no way to know if those thousands of people are right or wrong, or even existed.
O.