Hurray for nuclear power!
Seriously though, figured I'd pop in and give you some facts and numbers. You pull uranium out of the ground, and it is mainly U-238. A small fraction (.7%) is U-235. 235 will fission when hit by a neutron and produce more energy and neutrons. Generally nuclear reactors will run on low enriched uranium, only about 5% U-235. You cannot chemically seperate the two isotopes because they are the same element, so you have to enrich it by one of the few methods, most commonly gaseous diffusion and centrifuge (which Iran is currently trying to do). When you enrich the output uranium, you deplete the leftovers, which gives us depleted uranium. Plutonium is a transformation from U-238 with neutron interaction. The chemical seperation gives us pure plutonium which can be used in bombs, or can be used in special reactors. Current plans take old soviet plutonium bombs and use them as fuel for reactors. I also saw people mentioning thorium power. While we need thorium for it to work, it's not actually thorium that is giving us power, it's the transformation of thorium into U-233. An issue with this is that we also get U-232 from these, and that will put off very high energy gammas. We can't make bombs from U-233 because of it's very radioactive, and thus a hazard during production and storage to personnel.
Waste disposal is an issue, but one that people don't really understand. Right now, all the nuclear reactors in the US have their spent fuel stored on sight, either in spent fuel pools or dry storage. This fuel is becoming less radioactive every year that goes by, but there are 104 sites that it is being stored at. The navy has been burying their fuel out in the desert for 60 years, and have never had a problem transporting it across the country to their single disposal site. Other radioactive waste has designated spots for disposal as well. Only high level waste and spent nuclear fuel lacks a disposal sight currently. The US actually made a law back in the 80's that required the federal government to provide a central waste disposal site for high level and spent fuel, and required all nuclear utilities to pay into a fund for it's creation and operation. Nuke plants have lived up to their end for the last 30 years, but the federal government is failing to do what it agreed to do. From what I've seen of Yucca mountain, it looks like it will be pretty impressive once it's finished. The waste transport containers have really impressive testing specs.
Reprocessing spent fuel is really smart, and the french are really pushing that. Right now our known uranium deposits are holding up pretty well. China is really pushing into nuclear power as well, and it's said that they will build 100 new reactors by 2020 (all new gen 3 reactor types too!). Their developing nation is having serious issues with meeting power requirements and is hitting a roadblock on the carbon emissions side of coal. Producing so much coal power is making living in their country untolerable. There are so many people and cars that powering things with coal is no longer a viable choice.
Okay, now that we have covered that, I'll just go onto the track record. US nuclear power plants operate at full power for something like 95 % of the year. No other source of power can boast such a thing. People threw out some numbers about the cost of the power per KW that showed that it was comparable to coal, but that assumes a single plant lifetime of 40 years. Once you increase past 40 years, the cost goes down even further.
Some reactors also have double purpose. Yes, they provide direct electricity to the grid, but they also produce more. Technicium 99m is a special isotope that is used in medical applications. Somebody else was ranting on how hydrogen is the power of the future. High temperature reactors can be used for hydrogen production.
One thing that 9/11 did do for the country was increase the awareness that nuclear terrorism may cause nuclear material to be smuggled across borders. Getting your hands on nuclear material is NOT as easy as just ordering it over the phone. Radiation monitors at borders and ports ensure that radioactive material is not smuggled into the country.
Fusion research has indeed been telling us that fusion power is gonna be viable 10 - 15 years down the road, but that has always been suspect information. Fission research tells us that we will have safer and more efficient reactors 10 - 15 years down the road, and that is pretty much true. This technology is gonna take us places in the next couple of years. Maybe we'll actually be able to live up to CO2 emission standards.