I'm still pro nuclear, but the events here have me concerned about what has happened.
I'm not familiar with the BWR-3 designs involved in Japan, but have experience and knowledge of the safety systems designed to prevent this kind of accident in a BWR-6 which is a more modern design but still some 30 years old.
I have seen brief descriptions of modern BWR designs that said to be 1000 times less likely to suffer these kinds of accidents due to such features as coolant pumps internal to the reactor vessel as well as natural circulation capabilities that would prevent loss of cooling type accidents under loss of off-site power with no operator action for hours.
In the case of the Fukushima plants that have experienced explosions, following the loss of cooling leads be to believe that the cores of the plants involved are piles of slag.
In my experience the safety systems that should be in place, should also be behind thick walls of concrete, if they are built that way in the great corn/bean desert of Illinois where there is no threat of a tsunami, why did all the safety systems fail?
Did they have hydrogen recombiners to deal with the hydrogen produced when the core becomes uncovered?
Why did the diesel generators fail? In my opinion, there should have been a dozen locomotive sized diesel generators on site, did they all fail and why?
If the nuclear plant I worked at were at the Fukushima site and there was a Tsunami coming, the safest place to be would be in the control room which is almost 100 ft above the water level of the lake used as ultimate heat sink. The diesel generators were inside 3 foot concrete walls and so are the rest of the safety systems, as well as the control room.
I also wonder what kind of regulatory environment exists in Japan. In the US at least at the last time I was working at a nuclear plant there were both the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Institute of Nuclear Plant Operators. The NRC being a government agency paid for by licensing fees and INPO being staffed by the operators of various plants in a self regulating style.
And in closing there is too much disinformation going on as well as misunderstanding of the historical events.
Cherenobyl was a prompt criticality event, as was PL-1 in Idaho, where the power level went up to hundreds or thousand times rated power causing an explosion.
At Three Mile Island, several failures resulted in the water level in the core dropping below a safe level resulting in overheating of the fuel rods. The fuel rods being made of a Zirconium alloy which burns in the presence of water at a lower temperature than the melting point, which is where the hydrogen comes from. Once this burning starts, there really is no stopping it, which is why there are no partial meltdowns.
This was probably TL

R but there you go.