I think if you're going to have nuclear power, you have to do it right. Consider France for example. They've been using nuclear power for a long time, and haven't had an accident yet - plus, people trust the nuclear plants as totally safe. One reason for this is the standardization. All the plants in France are based on a singular model, which has been approved as 100% safe by the government atomic agency. Contrast this to the US, where every power plant is designed by some individual corporation, with very little government oversight. Standardization would be like socialism to these cats. Since the French method works so well, I think that any place considering nuclear power ought to study how they did it.
Yucca Mtn - I can't wait until there is a 1,044-car pileup on the interstate, caused by a drunk driver and a toxic waste transport truck. That will sell you on Yucca Mtn.
FYI, the disaster at 3-mile Island was caused by a burned-out indicator bulb. One of the selling points of coal is that the county doesn't blow up if an indicator light burns out.
The disaster at Chernobyl was human error. And we get plenty of that in the US.