Fusion in the sun, according to Coloumb's law two protons will always repulse each other more strongly the closer they get, Always , so you can't have fusion at the core of the sun, the greater the pressure on the two protons, the harder they push away from each other.
So... how do you get fusion of two protons in the sun?
There is a probability that one or the other will just happen to exist next to the other because of QM. They do not behave like hard little balls they behave like waveforms. So deteministically they can never approach each other. Probablistically they can.
That shows that protons do not behave classically, that you have to use wave-functions to correctly describe how they interact. It doesn't address whether the wave-functions themselves are fundamentally deterministic, does it?