Your commentary that "no one has died" is just such an example, of unscientific thought. It's the pleading of a PR firm, desperate to focus the thoughts on how safe everything must be. Along side the claims of how radiation is actually good for us, and everything we have been taught about radiation dangers is all based on one fraud of science long ago, the whole thing reeks of politics.
It's not science. Science would take animals and plants and carefully expose them, short term and long term, to radio-cesium, and the other dangerous products of reactors. Then measure and study, compare to controls groups, then publish the results. Both to understand what happens, as well as try and find remedies and methods to decontaminate and protect.
That would be scientific. Not endlessly repeating a mantra of "no one has died" or "it's safer than coal", or whatever the line of the week is.
Eh? What's that? You'll have to speak up. I presumed you were going to trounce me with the quote of some deranged PR person, from his rubber room to the effect that his former company wanted everyone to know that "no accidents can happen". No such luck, huh?
SoT is right about the deaths incurred from radiation in the nuclear industry, as far as anyone that I've heard and can back up. I was aware that there were a few; I've since looked it up, and he appears to be right. There have been some medical radiation deaths as well, and a couple of suicides and miscellaneous accidents (people stumbling over a lost medical radiation source, for example). Those are pretty much hard,
scientific facts, in that they can be verified by disinterested investigators. And it's also true that there are likely more, people who were thought to have died of other causes or whose death was covered for some reason, and has since been lost (this probably happened with some frequency in the Soviet Bloc and China; read about the Totsk test, as one grizzly example). Still the number, as he points out, is low compared to coal, oil, gas, geo and possibly one or more of the "renewable" sources, as a proportion of the delivered power. That's my statement, and I'm sticking to it until proved to be mistaken, having made a diligent effort on my part to find out those facts. So if you're not interested in these facts, what is it you are interested in comparing?
Can you make a similar statement about your position?
Your paragraph on testing has been done. When the results were reported, those against have always stated that such studies are not applicable, because cattle aren't human, or that pigs have different blood proteins, or that rabbits are so cute and it's cruel to use them for testing. Do you know that the EPA ran a pig and dairy cattle farm in the NNSS in Area 15 (right next door to Area 51 - hows that for dyslexia?) for about twenty-one years to study how cows took up
137iodine? Do you know that the first nuclear test after WWII had cows, pigs and other animals on board the target ships?