You don't have the luxury of having your National Flag define your skills, common sense and performance. There are people flying worldwide that shouldn't be flying and they are at every single airline, including yours. How many times during your brief to your FOs ( or cadets) do you say: "Hey, keep an eye on me and if you see anything that doesn't look right please speak up?" How many times do you think to yourself: I've got to keep an eye on junior over there and then fail to accept that you too are vulnerable to fatigue, distraction, not feeling well or any number of things that have an effect on how we perform. Do you ever self critique your own performance as you are taking notes on how your cadets are doing? The EK does have a good safety record but as you pointed out, you can "marginally" make every single flight over a period of time and have perfect statistics. The question really is: How far over the safety line are you? The pilots in the recent SFO Asiana crash had never had an accident (to my knowledge), but it's pretty obvious that they were far from safe pilots since they apparently didn't even know how to operate and manage the automation on their gee whiz 777. I guess they were just lucky, until that day. I've never had an accident or incident in my 25 year 121 career, so what does that mean about my skills vs yours? The answer is - who knows? Don't be ignorant enough to suggest that you are somehow better, more professional, know more or have higher standards than anybody else does because if you do, it simply verifies that your ego is running your mouth, not your brain. We all like to think that we are great pilots, but the truth is, none of us are probably as good as we think we are, including you.