The fundamental point is as PB and PJ said - we are talking about alternating current. Anyway you cut it - electrons actually flowing thru the wire, SRs notion that the electrons are like the balls in a Newton's cradle just transferring energy from one electron to the next, "source and sink" energy models - the current is alternating. Unidirectional flow stuff happens after the rectifiers, regardless of whether you think electrons go from minus to plus or the current goes from plus to minus.
So when you throw the on switch, yeah, the current flows. But it flows back and forth through the fuse, not just one direction. The idea behind a fuse is that it creates a bottleneck that will heat up and, due to its increasing resistance, blow if the current is too high. It's supposed to do that.
The guy who sells fuses tells you the most significant component upgrade in your system is the fuse.
The guy who sells cables tells you the most significant component upgrade in your system is the cables.
And - not to pretend that I'm any different - the guy who sells everything tells you the most significant component upgrade in your system is, well, everything.