Electrica said:
Again you're just counting what is seen. Visible matter accounts for about 5% of the matter in the universe, as the universe is still expanding and they've also concluded that it will continue to do so (and not contract). There are only new guesses as to what the other 95% is (dark matter, etc). When we can only explain +/- 5% of the matter in the universe then I'd say there's a whole lot more work to be done on the subject and new ideas should be welcomed.
This is a different problem entirely though! You're talking about DM and DE, neither of which have much relation to antimatter. The fact is that if antimatter existed in significant quantities, it would emit a noticeable gamma ray signature upon annihilation with normal matter. Welcoming new ideas is all fine and well, but we should both a) avoid creating unnecessary entities which cannot be experimentally detected and b) avoid contradicting what we already know about the universe.
Also, with regards to DM and DE, it may be true that we aren't very sure what exactly these entities are at this time. However, we do know, to a high degree of certainty, how these entities behave.
As far as anti-energy, there is a lot of work being done on over-unity energy production and that energy must come from somewhere. If it's not in a form that is detectable prior to its being obtained, (as detractors like to say) as if from thin air, then it states that the energy is being converted from a previously unconsidered (invisible) source. But I'm sure that you have a completely logical and text-book answer for that one.
I'm not very sure what you're talking about here. It almost seems as if you're describing potential energy as something "magic". For example, there is nothing detectable about the energy in a rock 5 meters above my head, but it will certainly gain energy as it falls. Did the energy appear from an invisible source? Not really. Am I misunderstanding what you're talking about here?
I apologize for the tone, but PF is, above all else, a place for discussing the current state of scientific theory. That said, we get a lot of people on here harping their own personal theories and very often these people seem to have some sort of vendetta against what scientists have been discovering the past several hundred years. It's a bit ridiculous sometimes, and what you were (are) saying seems to border on that line. Some degree of speculation is welcomed, but just be mindful of that line.