The issue at Fukushima is not one of waste disposal; It is one of cleaning up after a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and a huge Tsunami. And nobody's ass is on the line at Fukushima; the death and injury toll currently stands at zero radiation injuries or deaths. It is unlikely to rise. But you don't actually care about reality; you want it to be a life-threatening disaster so you can say 'I told you so', but it's not. It is a costly engineering disaster, but it isn't life threatening no matter how much you insist that it should be.
Your disregard for facts in this discussion is sad and tiresome.
Yes indeed you are tiresome and it makes me sad to realize how many people think like you.
So many people think we can tear apart ecosystems and put them back together again. Over a period of about ten years, I followed high level nuclear waste processing and disposal schemes closely and found that scheme after scheme failed at some level. We actually have a growing understanding of a lot of things that don't work. We also know that there are people in this world out to make their fortune on very ill advised things like the Keystone Pipeline (what the OP was about). No technology is without its problems but some are demonstrably less problematic than others. The real problem is allowing these problem technologies which could have some benefits to our society to be over-applied.
Tar sans oil extraction is actually a series of very problematic technologies all strung together. It is actually not just a strip mining operation. It also is a chemical extraction operation that leaves extremely toxic residues at or very near the mine site. It consumes large volumes of water which are polluted then discharged on the surface in ponds that are many square miles in extent. From there, this extra low grade crude is loaded on trains that might explode about anywhere. The options considered for powering the steam and chemical extraction process at the mine site are petrochemical fuel or nuclear reactors. Trans Canada cannot get their pipeline to their west coast because of environmental problems. So this problem is proposed to be solved by
shipping it through a pipeline to the gulf coast of the U.S, We have already experienced pipeline failures with Tar Sands Crude and it is actually far worse than other crudes to try to clean up. The acid residues in this crude are extremely corrosive and there are there because acids are used in the extraction process. Because of this acidity large amounts of heavy metals remain in this oil. All of these things militate against long term use of pipelines or trains to haul this shit.
If you have ever lived in a refinery town and I have lived in four of them, you know that the separation and fractioning processes produce large amounts of very toxic waste that requires disposal. There is always a component of water pollution in these towns and in whatever receiving water that might be nearby. The reasons for denying the Keystone pipeline are many. Its problems are many. It is actually in our interest and cheaper to work on reducing our dependence on these very flawed petrochemical technologies. They are already over-applied and there is a lot of opportunity in replacing them with less toxic, less dangerous and less environmentally disruptive technologies. We really don't need to just Rambo everything through and ignore safety. That is what the Keystone people want to do. When their illustrious spokesmen include people like Boener and McConnel, that alone should be sufficient warning that this project is not in the interest of the common people of this country and a pure detriment to countries threatened by global warming.