I am
and
that some people feel the need to come onto a positive thread about HE on the home ed board and start slagging off people's choices and evangelising about schools. Do home edders go onto the school education threads and start slagging off school and evangelising about HE? No? Well why do it here then? So fucking rude. 
Positives about HE for me...
DD is much happier than she was when she was at school.
She has a really lovely group of friends who accept her for who she is. Nobody excludes her, teases or taunts her (unlike when she was at school...).
We can take her learning at her own pace... she picks some things up really quickly (so is probably ahead of where she would be at school), and struggles a lot with others (maths) so we can spend more time on that and take it slowly.
When teaching her one-to-one I can make sure she stays focused and on task; much more difficult to do when she's with other children as she's very easily distracted by other kids.
Flexibility. She recently spent a month in New Zealand with her dad, which wouldn't have been possible when she was schooled. Term time holidays, flexibility to have longer stays with family members, visiting places when they aren't crowded with people. Not being tied to the school day.
I get the best of her (and the worst, of course!), rather than the over stimulated, stressed out meltdowns that we had almost every afternoon when she came out of school.
I was amazed at how smoothly the assessment process for Aspergers (diagnosed last year) was, having heard/read so many horror stories about people battling for years to get a diagnosis for their child and to get their child's needs met by the LA/school. Mainly I think that we were very lucky to see such skilled professionals (developmental paed, SALT, clinical psych), but also I think that it's because we didn't have to fight to get a referral through a reluctant and unsupportive school/LA. I went through the GP, who initially said it would have to be via school, but referred me directly when I said we HE.
When I read about children on the spectrum being desperately unhappy or bullied at school, especially as there are a whole different set of issues for girls with AS/ASD, I am profoundly grateful that I have the means and the knowledge to HE DD and that she won't have to go through that.