Thank you all for your input. There seem to be three main groups of people here whose positions can be summed up with a sentence.
1. "Jesus isn't a good moral example to live by".
2. "There other figures who are just as good, if not better, examples to live by."
3. "I simply don't want to."
If you're in Group 3, then that's obviously your right and fair enough. There isn't anything else to discuss, I guess. Some of those who fall into Group 2 have listed some figures, but at least the majority of these figures seem to have some sort of very major issue with them, such as owning slaves or admiring bloody dictatorships or building weapons of mass destruction. Personally, I haven't seen any example that to me provides a better moral example than Jesus. For those who fall into Group 1, I'm interested in what makes you tick. I've seen some answers already, mainly focused on how if he isn't divine, then he seems bonkers. That's a fair point, though even if he did have some sort of mental disorder that would not take away from the actual moral philosophy itself. "Love thy neighbour" is still a good thing to follow, even if it comes out of the mouth of a schizophrenic.
Another criticism is Jesus teaching that thinking about "sin" is as bad as "sin" itself. The only example I know of where Jesus says this is in the case of adultery, where thinking about a woman lustfully is tantamount to adultery "in your heart". This is expanded on later in more general terms in Matthew 15:19-20: "For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander. These are what defile a person. But to eat with unwashed hands does not defile anyone". So if we put this together, Jesus is saying that retaining these defiling thoughts in our hearts without rejecting them will lead us to committing these particular sins. Not that having those thoughts is just as bad as committing the act.
The other criticism is that Jesus teaches that the oppressed merely put up with suffering for the sake of reward in Heaven, but I would like to see some actual basis for this criticism as I cannot think of or find any example where Jesus actually says this.