I'm getting ****ing sick of asperger's syndrome. You go on the forums and most of these people are self-diagnosed and full of themselves. I've seen people who were bummed when their doctor revoked their diagnosis. They think a label alone makes them unique or different. They just don't value themselves.
All of a sudden people with exceptional abilities or gifted intelligence with deep "unusual" interests accompanying social ineptitude are labeled defective. Missing something. All that is needed is to ****ing learn. Take it from someone who's received anonymous emails from my college for autism conferences because I'm practically a mute in class.
These labels perpetuate the symptoms they describe. It's a dangerous slope. An excuse not to try changing. An excuse to give up, no matter how much you wish you could connect with others or how much you don't like making them so uncomfortable.
I think I know where you're coming from on this. It is very easy to label ourselves as something in order to help ourselves cope with it; it's a way to intellectualize our fears and shortcomings to make it easier to understand and accept (and yes, often, to hide from).
My sister recently announced via facebook that she thought she had asperger's, because she had read up on it and she could identify with the symptoms and with autistic children that she had recently worked with. I kind of felt bad, but we had to tell her, no, you don't have asperger's, you just aren't good at socializing like everyone else in our family.
It does seem like some people are seeking some sense of self-importance (or perhaps just a level of understanding from others) by telling other people that they have a disorder.