About your last paragraph - do you have any sources on this? It almost sounds like supersymmetry meets nuclear fission. And yeah, the antiparticle out of nowhere is a little bizarre. The idea of a process that's required to create a surplus of usable energy that also involves making exact duplicates of reactants beforehand? Also, how would annihilation give the same energy output (should really give a lot more) and somehow leave barium and krypton nuclei behind? Annihilation doesn't really like matter leftovers! Perhaps reading the sources will clear things up a little...
As for the rest of this quote - I'm sorry, but I still can't accept it. You're talking about the masses becoming infinite before becoming energy - the problem with this is, the only way they're going to gain mass (via relativity) is for enough energy to be supplied to them in the first place. If you claim the reactants reach an infinite mass, then conservation laws alone require that an infinite amount of mass/energy be supplied to the reactants. Again, it requires sourcing an impossible amount of energy and upon fission the release of an incredibly fatal amount of energy for all existence.
You keep saying that the mass becoming infinite and in doing so transforms into energy. Maybe I should point out that the E and p Lorentz transforms don't actually apply to photons? I'm assuming you got them from the wikipedia article on the Lorentz factor, it's further down the page. Sorry if you knew this already, but from trying to determine your train of thought, it seems like you think that the gamma photons have to follow the E and p Lorentz transforms too, and the only way to do that is to have the initial reactant mass go to infinity to get an appropriate Lorentz factor - but that isn't necessary as the E and p transforms will never apply to photons. Is this in any way relevant to what you were thinking?
Actually, I wasn't really suggesting anything gravitational. I just thought "infinite yield explosion = BAD."
I'm glad you mentioned black holes. It's already been pointed out that they don't contain infinite mass, but from the POV of someone being pulled into one at their very centre they have a gravitational singularity where density appears to go to infinity (again, black holes really aren't my strong point, so I'm loth to say that this is a good example of an infinity, maybe it's just apparently present because our understanding of the laws of physics breaks down at that point in spacetime).
So maybe we'll end up talking about black holes now - but I have to say, HR, I think we're all curious to know what the overarching point of this thread is?