Hi Peter,
I will definitely look at your essay. I took a peek already and the prose is very strong and I like Bell's Theorem stuff although it can be tricky to understand -- for me at least. Therefore I look forward to reading your essay.
By the way you may be interested in some recent work related to Bell's Theorem. First there is the EPR=ER (Einstein-Rosen) proposal of Susskind and Maldacena in "Cool horizons for entangled black holes" arXiv:1306.0533) where from what I read the proposal is there is some entanglement via wormholes (which then seems somewhat classical). They claim this resolves the "firewall paradox" of Almheiri, Marolf, Polchinski and Sully (AMPS). One can find a discussion of Bob, Alice and the firewall at
http://www.simonsfoundation.org/quanta/20121221-alice-and-bob-meet-the-wall-of-fire/
[Also note in terms of priority Friedwardt Winterberg had a proposal for a BH firewall already in 2001 http://www.znaturforsch.com/aa/v56a/56a0889.pdf. I have not looked into this in enough detail to understand if Winterberg's firewall is the same as the AMPS one -- there do appear to be some differences -- but this does make the point that a lot of times things are a matter of luck, timing, or the right affiliation :-/].
Second there is the Nature Physics article from about 3 years ago "On the reality of the quantum state" Matthew F. Pusey, Jonathan Barrett, Terry Rudolph, Nature Physics 8, 475-478 (2012). We discussed this article in our Friday theory group meetings here for 2-3 weeks and never could exactly understand why this was such a great advance (the reason we came across this work in the first place was because it was written up in some popular science magazine as "the most important result since Bell's theorem). I think you can also find this article on the arXiv now. Also from the end of the abstract the authors say "..Here we show that any model in which a quantum state represents
mere information about an underlying physical state of the system, and in which systems that are prepared independently have independent physical states, must make predictions which contradict those of quantum theory."
Anyway I will have a look and comment on your essay soon.
Best,
Doug