Admiral Shran, it's a logical fallacy to defend Archer's actions merely by pointing out the questionable and morally reprehensible actions of other
captains.

I don't defend the actions in "A Private Little War" (though I think "the Apple" would have been a better example), "Homeward", "For the Uniform", or numerous examples in
Voyager, but such decisions don't validate Archer's poor ethical conduct.
1. "Dear Doctor": Archer condones the genocide of an entire species, for no better reason that Phlox's horoscope told him that he was suppose to become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds. (Technically, he spouts a bunch of inaccurate, targ manure about evolution that would have Darwin spinning in his grave.) I realize Phlox is not human, but serving on an Earth ship he might have at least looked up the Hippocratic Oath. Archer has even less of an excuse. He even attempts to justify his stance in the "Observer Effect" when he finds himself on the receiving end of of a species casual indifference to death. Of course, Archer tries to argue that the situations are completely different, after all Archer condemned billions to a slow horrible death for something the species could not control, the Organians are merely watching three people die due to their own stupidity. On the bright side, had they died Archer and Co. could have had their stories told in the 22nd Century edition of the Darwin Awards.
2. "A Night in Sickbay": This episode is the culmination of over a season's worth of reckless behavior on Archer's part. By rights, half of his crew should probably be dead by now, but this is the first episode where there actually seem to be consequences, namely his dog gets sick. Aside from being the episode where the show officially jumped the shark, ANiS showcases Archer's inability to learn from past mistakes. Archer endangered his ship and crew by his reckless behavior. In "Strange New World" he ignored the advice of his first officer to scan the planet to make certain it is safe to disembark, and takes down an away team (including his dog). In "Breaking the Ice" he seems willing to let two of his crew die rather than ask the Vulcans for help. These are only three examples, but are hardly isolated incidents. Actually, I'd have to say they are more like par for the course. Archer naturally uses the fact that his dog is dying as opportunity to reflect on how his decisions to date have repeated endangered those he cares about... oh wait, that would be rational, and we can't have him stop acting like a teenager now. So, the man i supposedly a trained diplomat blames the locales and threatens to pee on their sacred tree.
3. "The Andorian Incident": Archer decides to go harass some Vulcan monks. I found it a bit ironic that JiNX-01 lists this as the #1 positive command decision. Archer turns over Vulcan military intelligence to the Andorians. The Vulcans are supposedly Earth's ally yet Archer doesn't think twice about betraying them to a species who had spent the episode beating him up, and threatening to rape his first officer (but she is a Vulcan after all, it's not as if she was human). Yes, the faithful Trekkie may know that Andorians will one day be members of the Federation, but all Archer is aware of is what happens in the episode, which I suppose includes the fact that the Andorians seem to hate the Vulcans almost as much as he does. Somehow I doubt fans would look as sympathetically on Archer if the antagonists in the episode had been the Klingons, Romulans or Cardassians...
4. Fortunate Son: Archer helps pirates against human civilians. These aren't the mostly harmless folks on the internet who steal intellectual property. These are the genuine rape, murder, and pillage type pirates. Pirates who have repeatedly attacked these human merchants. Perhaps Archer sympathizes with the pirates since, as Praetor_Shinzon points out, in "Damage" he engages in a little piracy of his own. So, apparently in Galactic Piracy versus Civilization, Archer is on the side of piracy!
5. "Broken Bow": Leaving Earth. I could go in to the prevalence of Ends Justify the Means philosophies, especially in season three, but the fact is most of this could have been prevented if the Terrans stuck to their solar system, or at least assigned a different captain to their ship. Archer seems to have been given the position purely out of nepotism. Personally, I don't find Archer's blatant racism (or specism?) to be at all endearing, especially in a series that is suppose to serve as an optimistic and hopeful view of humanity's future. Archer holds the Vulcans in contempt for holding humanity back, but if he is the best Earth has to offer and his actions are anything to go by, the Vulcans seem to be justified in their belief that humanity wasn't ready to swim and should have stuck to the kiddie pool.
