STR
So:
1 - a new fundamental force, repulsive and long range, exists only with dark matter.
Already analysed. And, seeing as you post alternative explanations without expanding on this one, I inferr no one (whose work you managed to find) managed to explain (make less 'out there') the
wild speculation I pointed out exists within this explanation.
2 - dark matter annihilates when it encounters itself.
But it only turns into
other forms of undetectable dark matter (!)
These new forms of dark matter: - have no mass/gravity or they would become planets, black holes, meaning dark matter is gradually losing its gravitational potency;
- or they have a gravitational field and they form planets, etc (see no 4).
Here's an ideea:
perhaps, when dark matter annihilates with itself, the result is baryonic matter (meaning the dark matter is gradually being transformed into baryonic matter) and standard stars, planets, etc result - in this way, we don't even have to speculate, positing the existance of X forms of dark matter (as if 1 isn't enough

!). But this still doesn't explain why there's still so much untransformed dark matter after ~13.7 billion years.
3 - dark matter does not interact with itself.
Dark matter generates a gravitational force. It not interacting with gravitational force means it has no mass.
And this means
dark matter generates a gravitational force without having a mass
? Wow - I thought dark matter was there in order to 'save' general relativity

.
Plus, this does not explain the
dark matter halo. How were these dark matter concentrations formed - if not due to their gravity or the gravity of baryonic matter? Another new fundamental physical interaction?
4 - dark matter planets, black holes, etc
If one does not posit new fundamental interactions, dark matter is much more ameanable to forming black holes, etc, than baryonic matter.
Why is such a large percentage of dark matter still existing as a cloud/halo after ~13.7 billion years when so much of the baryonic matter formed into stars, etc?
5 - neutrinos.
Their total mass is far less than dark matters. Indeed, the mass of neutrinos cannot hold the galaxies together, as per general relativity. Plus, they are travelling at high speeds. This means that their kinetic energy overcomes their gravity. It also means that the
neutrinos do not form halos around galaxies; indeed, the neutrinos that were in our galaxy ~13.7 illion years ago have long ago left it.
"because the other guy wants me to explicitly prove the existence of dark matter to a degree cosmologists haven't yet."
So - you admit dark matter is not only NOT experimentally observed, but even its theoretical foundament is filled with wild speculations, inconsistencies, etc - in other words, that no one managed to create a consistent theory of dark matter just as no one managed to create a consistent theory of dark energy?
PS:
"The other guy...I'm done with him for all the reasons I and JarodRussell stated."
You should have put this at the beginning of your post. Apparently, I wasted a perfectly good post with you.
As for yourself, what I found out about you in this thread is that, far from being scientifically-minded, you're inclined towards dogmatism.