I think before you can be convinced that PHP is a language worth keeping around, you need to recognise that the objections you have to it are just not obstacles to people who use it everyday.

At it's core, you have a language that provides an execution environment that is easy to setup and easy to begin to use. The language itself is highly orthogonal, which makes learning it easy. It does not come with a framework That You Must Use, or and IDE that is essential. It does not have a separate compile step. All this means you have a language that does what it does and gets out of the way. For programmers, this provides an almost blank sheet of paper to go off in whatever direction they choose to build what they need to build. The language is flexible enough that there is often a variety of ways to achieve the end-result, some better than others, but others one amongst equals. 

PHP makes things like strings and hash-tables first-class objects and provides a generous array of tools to manipulate them. There is a wide-range of built-in libraries and there is a wealth of third-party code to supplement this. In addition, it has all the tools and features to scale to massive massive websites on huge databases.

Some of its current problems are as a result of the language being forced to "grow up" as thousands developers make it do things the designers never even thought of, let alone thought possible. Fixing these requires a slow and careful migration so that you pull along the bulk of the developers. Notice that it took some effort to get people off PHP v3 in the last two years - and v6 is just around the corner!

It is possible to write high quality code in PHP, with clean interfaces, good separation of logic and so on. The problem is that the average quality of PHP programmer does not reach that high. And you can't force them to be better -- because that simply doesn't work. They have to learn how themselves. *If* they are capable of learning. I've seen PHP programmers who are just incapable of getting beyond their current mediocre level.

PHP has a lot of warts, but it is effective and widespread. Just don't get hung up on what it does 'wrong' -- most PHP programmers don't and don't need to.