Look, there is nothing wrong with a healthy scepticism when it comes to prevailing consensus theories in cosmology. There exists a huge dung pile of discarded cosmological theories.
Agreed.
The point here is that your EM cosmological theories contradict known laws of physics and observations.
I accept that I can't personally 'explain' everything I see in cosmology with EU theories. I also realize that there are many things in astronomy that I can explain with EU theories and I am more interested in those things than I am worried about what I can't explain.
I do not understand nor agree with your statement about EU theory "contradicting known laws of physics". EU theory is based strictly on the laws of known empirical physics, and essentially is nothing more than a combination of MHD theory and GR theory. My primitive redshift example might contradict observation in some ways, but not the laws of nature. The EM field is known to accelerate plasma and it is 39 OOM more powerful than gravity. If there is a known force of nature that might explain the acceleration we see, the EM field is it. I can't necessary explain all the details with GR and MHD theories, but I have "faith" that one day someone will be able to explain these redshift patterns exactly with some combination of EM fields, GR theory (as Einstein taught it) and MHD theory. I trust empirical physics.
I do however tend to "lack belief" in things that fail to show up in the lab, and things that were created in a purely ad hoc way from a single individual's imagination, aka "inflation". I don't believe that "acceleration' has anything to do with "dark energy" because "dark energy" never accelerated a single atom let alone a whole physical universe.
If some force of nature causes this universe to accelerate, IMO the most likely culprit is an expanding EM field and cosmic rays. I don't really worry so much about what cannot be explained via MHD and GR, as what can be explained with these theories, aka EU theory. Sure there are "weaknesses" and there are "problems" with EU/PC theory just like there are problems with all theories. IMO, the problems in EU theory pale in comparison the myriad of staggering metaphysical/empirical problems with Lambda-CMD theory.
Keep in mind that there is some hope that even if I don't personally come up with a working model that exactly matches the redshift observations, someone else may eventually do exactly that. There is hope I could be vindicated over time and that this weakness will become a source of strength for EU theory one day.
Inflation is dead. There is no hope whatsoever that inflation will ever be empirically demonstrated in controlled experimentation so that particular "weakness" in mainstream theory will last forever, or until it's replaced with something else.
For the last 35 years or so I've put my money on empirical science and it's never let me down, not ever. It may be limited. It may need work, and it can even be replaced with newer (empirical) models. I'll take a working model that isn't quite right over a 'made up' math formula based on ad hoc constructs any day of the week.