The only differences between the all-the-same wood and canvas windmills and the all-the-same metal and carbon fiber windmills is that the latter are newer and produce useful amounts of energy. People oppose them (sometimes to hysterical degrees, see "windmill sickness") because they're not used to them.
Offshore wind is all well and good, but wind resources are limited. There are only some locations where they make sense to build. I'm not familiar with the Netherlands' wind map, but in the US there are land regions that are equally or more wind rich than the coastline. And I'm sure most people who oppose wind turbines on land would oppose them on the sea for "ruining the beaches", whether they're visible from the shore or not.
Solar is also all well and good, but just like wind it has location limitations, and wind is useful to provide at night when solar is obviously not functional.
Nuclear power is hobbled by a number of factors, some which are also public hysteria, but others which are very serious. First amongst them is the cost, not in dollars euros but in time. Nuclear plants take decades from planning to operation, and that's not an investment that anybody's gonna make unless the state is just drowning them in dosh the whole time as compensation. Perhaps more pressingly, new nuclear plants at this point will not come online in time to make a difference in the energy and climate crisis.
In addition to this, we're facing a (usable) uranium shortage that is similar in nature to the oil shortage, which even if mitigated will still raise the price of nuclear energy from its more attractive status quo.