Ionization energy and quantum idea….

For more then a century, millions of researchers has worked to implement the quantum idea in different fields of science. This work provided to be so extensive and fruitfully that few have ever had the time to think if this quantum idea is so consistent with experimental reality.
Around 2005, I wanted to publish a scientific paper based on idea that ionization energy variation contradicts the quantum hypothesis. As expected, no scientific journal was interested to publish such paper, even the data in the paper could be verified by a layman without any scientific background.
Is it something simpler than a linear dependency of two units in a graph for a clear conclusion?
Someone would ask himself rhetorically… how could it possible to not publish such paper?
The answer is very simple: how could a referee deny all his scientific activity and say bluntly that not only her but millions of people have worked to a new epicycles theory in science?
Therefore the idea was published in an Atomic structure book in 2007:
http://elkadot.com/index.php/en/books/atomic/ionization-energy-variation

Later the concept was revised and improved, published in another book about chemistry in 2009, and advertised in for discussion groups in 2009 with next formulation:

The neglected ionization energy variation for isoelectronic series can reveal more useful information about electrons structure; the problem is these data are in contradiction with actual quantum theory. The quantum prediction for work functions values are in contradiction with experiments; for metals, ionization energy and work function must be equal but in reality they are not.
For other classes of compounds quantum mechanic fails again to predict something. A striking example is the case of metallic oxides having work functions values smaller then metals. It is outrageous how a covalent or ionic bound liberate electrons easier then a metallic bound in frame of actual physics.
http://elkadot.com/index.php/en/books/chemistry/ionization-energy-and-work-function

People who haven’t learned from past experiences will have all the time the tendency to repeat the same errors. I will paraphrase a famous economist who said that in a free market economy there is an invisible hand pushing the things forward; in science the opposite is true: the invisible hand of a entire system think that pushing something under the carpet will maintain the actual status quo.
Will it be so or will not be so?!
Best regards,
Sorin