A few more notes I'd like to make:
Some personal experience regarding the conception that raising an autistic kid is so much more difficult than raising a neurologically typical one: I have an older brother and sister, both NT. When I was about 18, my dad told me - and he's not the kind of person who just says stuff if he doesn't mean it - that from his 3 kids, I was the one who caused the least of worries, who was the most responsible, and who needed the least parenting and frankly, and I wish it was the other way around in a sense, I think he was absolutely right with that statement. It's just one opinion of course, and it's not like I don't run into problems in my life now; there are days that I hardly function at all, life's not easy. But the whole notion that an autistic kid will always be more difficult to parent is simply not true.
Then there's the idea that clients pay good money so they deserve only top notch material: wouldn't it be up to the clients to decide about what kind of donor they'd prefer? I don't know this business, maybe there are sperm banks who cater to a certain subset of clients. But this is the largest sperm bank in London, not some designer boutique selling unicorn leather underpants. Refusing whole classes of people on this basis is perpetuating the idea that simply because one's autistic, one is undesirable, one shouldn't procreate, and this will have a direct effect on how we think about ourselves, and how society as a whole thinks about us. For me there certainly was a time when I'd think 'I don't ever want to bring this stuff, this me, on my children' and that shouldn't be surprising. When you're being put down for crazy and insane for a bit too long, it's only normal to start to believe that crap. But I'm not crazy, and I'm not insane. I'm not 'damaged goods'. I'm autistic, and I'm actually pretty awesome. Not despite of it, but because of it, because this autism isn't some side thing, it's in everything I do, it's in how I see the world, how I smell, how I hear, how I feel, how I think and how I do. 24/7. It doesn't mean I can't be a bit of a dick at times too, but apparently not being a bit of a dick isn't a requirement.
And putting autism next to things like cancer... it boggles my mind. Autism isn't a disease, it's a neurological condition. It doesn't kill me. Me not being very prone to make eye-contact for example isn't in itself a problem. Some people turn it into a problem, which will be a problem for me as it will affect my functioning, but it doesn't need to be a problem.
Also: these centers don't just 'store and offer' sperm, they are part of a bigger fertility services
industry (in italics, because it's not an industry, it's health care. Hospitals and the like shouldn't be run as a business and making a profit should not be the goal.) If it were just a matter of 'jacking off some dude and inserting the sperm into the vagina', than why have any of this at all? It's not about providing people with the perfect kid designed to their specific wishes. It's about giving people who can't otherwise conceive fulfill their desire to have children and an autistic kid is as good as any. We're not a disaster, we're not a horror story and we're not an epidemic that should be eradicated.
I'm going through the comments on the site itself and they are, as usual, cringeworthy. It's clear that to the general public, eugenics is still a very easy sell. All the usual comments are there: traits are undesirable or unworthy, the gene pool should be optimized and natural selection (really? Wouldn't that be quite ironic in a discussion closely related to infertility?), we're a burden on society and we cost too much. It's basically an institution deciding which traits are good and which are bad, and that's a big assumption to make, that's discrimination turned into policy. What if hospitals were to make it policy to stop giving treatment to certain people based on their merits? Should we sterilize the poor, or stop giving valuable medicine to the unemployed? I think we can do better than that, as a society.
I'd rather not see stuff like this make a comeback.