We will realize that once you understand how risk assesement work. But then by the time you do, you will be the same opinion as us , so....
Speaking of the devil. Wasn't it you who claimed:
"In the case of the 2 japanese plant we are not even going as far as catastrophic meltdown. To give you an idea, Chernobyl (which is by the way NOT even a likely scenario here, and was a recipe book for egregerious error)"
and
"Nothing is safe in life. Nothing. The question is what are the risk, and are they acceptable, and what are the consequence when the risk becomes reality. The problem is, people don't seem to be able to rationaly assess the nuclear risks, and the media is not helping. 10000 people die in the tsunami, and all most of coverage we get is of the nuclear reactors."
I guess you're the expert in risk assessment here, not. It turns out your assessment fell quite short of the seriousness of the crisis. You even criticized the media for exaggerating the issue. But they get paid to do that. Do you get paid to undervalue the risks?
I'll try to summarize my risk assessment in one paragraph. The death of so many people is a very sad thing, but we must also realize that no amount of money will bring them back to life and no amount of money will allow us to predict were everyone will be at all times and guarantee a safe spot in case of a tsunami. More so no amount of money will allow us to prevent an earthquake from happening. Predict yes, maybe. But bolt down the tectonic plates no. But we can take better precautions with the power plants. If there was prior knowledge of a large tsunami in the last 1000 years and it costs 100 billion to clean up this mess (conservative cleanup and rebuild costs). That's 100 million a year on average that the risk is worth. You can do a lot with 100 million a year in security infrastructure and best practices. For Japan's 54 nuclear plants that's a 2 million annual budget. That's my risk assessment, what's yours?
Power plant count source:
http://www.euronuclear.org/info/encyclopedia/n/nuclear-power-plant-world-wide.htm