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Eh, yes. "At potential risk" is very different from "human deaths due to". The obligatory xkcd might be useful for you.
And how is this different from e.g. living in cities? That, too, puts you "at potential risk" and I'm sure there are very long term consequences.
Plus, the usual nirvana fallacy. Nuclear plants have downsides? Sure they do. But let's do a proper comparison:
Are you going to say that the nuclear power plant is the worst choice here?
That is a thing I've never asserted.
To restore my initial argument: the very same presence of nuclear power plants makes the world more fragile, because eliminating a percentage of the population (say, a third as with the Black Plague or 90% as with smallpox in South America) runs the risk of eliminating people who know how to run and maintain the plants, thereby creating multiple nuclear accidents.