Vote Kira
No. The plants are expensive to build and the waste that they generate is toxic for centuries. Even if the waste was buried in containers and sealed in an underground concrete or lead or whatever chamber, if there was an earthquake or any other sort of movement of the surrounding rock it could destroy the chamber and release the radioactive material into the ground water. The idea that nuclear energy is 'clean' energy is a hoax. It should only be used in places where other ways of producing energy are not viable.
I'm no expert, but I've written a few research papers on this topic, and, actually, nuclear energy has enormous potential to be safe.
I'll start with the waste. While it is true that the waste is dangerous to almost all life forms for somewhere between decades and tens of thousands of years, depending on the type of material and which process it was involved in, it can be safely stored. Regions of Yucca Mountain in Nevada have been proposed waste disposal regions, as they would safely store the materials despite any natural disaster, were one to occur, which, given the region, would be somewhat unlikely. The proposed region is also already incapable of supporting life, so there is no risk to any sentient being.
As for the safety of the actual plants, there have only been two serious incidents in the fifty odd years that nuclear power plants have been implemented, an already significantly lower incidence rate than other power sources such as coal-burning plants. And when a closer look is taken at the two incidents (Chernobyl and Three Mile Island), it is obvious that a nuclear power plant can operate safely. Chernobyl was built to safety standards that were appalling even in that era, and this standards have only risen with time. The idea that something like that could happen is unthinkable if one takes into account the enormous regulation of nuclear power plants. The incident at Three Mile Island was not caused by any failure in the plant itself, but rather in user error. There was a minor mishap, the attendants strayed from protocol, and some bad s**t happened. (Though I don't have any reliable source for this, my father, who spent 26 years in the Navy working in the nuclear field once told me that a properly built nuclear power plant could have an F-16 collide with it without releasing any substantial radiation). That paired with the fact that the average coal-burning plant actually releases more radiation on a day-to-day basis than the average nuclear power plant shows just how safe these plants are.
And while nuclear energy does produce hazardous waste, that waste can be stored where it will not threaten life. The greenhouses gases produced by so many other methods cause just as much harm, and are not so easily stored safely. These gases are not produced at nearly the same rates at nuclear power plants as other power sources, meaning that nuclear energy is, in that and other respects, a clean energy. And currently, France produces almost half of it's energy by means of nuclear power. They manage to do this without wasting money on admittedly expensive plants, because nuclear plants produce more energy per dollar than coal and solar (though current research into solar will likely change that fact within 2-4 years). So while the individual plants are expensive, the waste is dangerous, and the plants aren't perfect, the energy is cheaper per kilowatt hour, the danger is a non-factor, and they are as, if not more so, safe than most other types of plants.