Are you claiming Arnie Gundersen is a 'quack'?
Gundersen is chief engineer of Fairewinds Associates, an energy consulting company.
[3] He previously worked for Nuclear Energy Services in 
Danbury, a consulting firm where he was a senior vice president. Gundersen holds a master's degree in nuclear engineering.
[4]
Arnold Gundersen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Besides his testimony what part of three roofs structures taking off at high speed tells you there is nothing to be concerned about? When it happened in Chernobyl there was lots of concerned people. Germany decided quite quickly r\that nuclear power would be phased out ASAP. Where do the richest and most powerful people on the planet reside? Downwind?
Just what sourses are you relying on to give you the impression that the ones mentioned above are also jumping the gun on just how dangerous the situation really is. So far the only ones claiming there is no danger is the operators of the plant and the Government of that Nation and a (not so innocent) organization that is in place to promote the safety of nuclear power, the same ones that put out a report about the after effects of Chernobyl that is easily debunked, watch the vid of the deformned children that the state is taking care of and tell me again there is no need for the people living in the immediate area not to be very concerned. Once those defects start showing up it will be a tad late for them to get concerned. Ask them to ship you some water so you and your whole family can take the taste test if you are so convinced.
Like it or not the ones who are supposed to be protecting the least importasnt in society are the same ones that will be the most likely ones to lie to them, while taking steps to protect themselves and their families from that same non-existent danger.
Germany to close all of its nuclear plants by 2022 - The Washington Post
 					 						By  Steven Mufson, Published: May 30 	
 				
 			 			 				 				 				 					Germany, the economic engine of Europe, said Monday that it will  close all of its nuclear power plants over the next 11 years, the  latest aftershock from the Japanese earthquake and partial meltdown it  set in motion at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex.
 						The move is an about-face for German Chancellor Angela Merkel,  whose government until recently had supported nuclear power as a way to  generate electricity without releasing additional greenhouse gases — and  without increasing reliance on Russia, Germany’s main source of natural  gas. 
 				
It also marks a new setback for nuclear power proponents, who have  been on the defensive since four of the reactors at Fukushima Daiichi  started leaking radioactive materials in mid-March.  
Earlier, Merkel’s party, the Christian Democratic Union, had advocated the
 extension of operating licenses  for the country’s 17 nuclear power plants by an average of 12 years,  saying that nuclear power is needed as an important “bridging  technology” while renewables make further advances. 
But in the  wake of the Fukushima crisis, Merkel announced the temporary closure of  seven of the nuclear plants. Now, after another wave of  anti-nuclear-power demonstrations, Merkel said that those plants would  remain closed, that there would be no extensions and that all remaining  plants would be shut down by 2022.