tfleming said:
http://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/64/9/3288
thought all of you might like to see this site; it's a really good example of what I'm talking about
Okay, a few more things...
As has been pointed out, this is not the sci.physics.research newsgroup. Feel free to use that venue if that's where your colleagues are. This site, PhysicsForums, is primarily geared toward helping high school and undergraduate students. Those of us here with more advanced degrees are not here to discuss our research with the objective of getting advice from peers, there just isn't a critical mass of that level of expertise to make that productive, instead, we are here to offer the students added guidance in their studies. You seem to be getting far too worked up about this when this is simply not the site to post your newest theories (the Theory Development forum is a misnomer, check out the other threads here discussing that and the reasons the admins here are considering eliminating it).
As for the article you just referenced, that would be fine to discuss. If what you need is some input from those outside your immediate field on understanding some of the literature, I can't promise you'll get a lot of useful input, but if you post a link to a reference like that and want to discuss it, that would be acceptable. That's generally the boundary between what's acceptable and not acceptable on this board...if it has been published in a peer-reviewed article, it can be discussed, if it is unpublished work or published in a non-peer-reviewed source, then it crossed that boundary to unacceptable, mainly because we can no longer verify the merit of the source. Keep in mind, the people on this board represent a range of specializations, but certainly cannot be experts in everything, so we could err toward rejecting something that is a legitimate new theory, but you just have to accept that because we cannot evaluate everything in every field, we have to set the limits somewhere that minimized the risk of confusing students with misinformation. It's good for them to be exposed to new findings, but we try to limit that to recent, peer-reviewed sources rather than works not yet published.
Lastly, the personal attacks on the mentors exhibited in this thread really don't help your credibility at all. All scientists know tenacity is one of the most important qualities for success, and rejection happens. You have to be able to roll with the punches without getting angry about it. Every scientist faces rejection, often, but you can't make it personal or you'll burn out pretty quickly. Let's just say your attitude in this thread does not convey a sense of professionalism I would expect of a career scientist.