I think the best thing is to let her make her own decisions and not second-guess her choices. It’s ridiculous to think that there’s one magical “best thing” to do in a complicated situation like this.
I fail to see what does her sexual orientation have to do with anything.
The choice is between keeping the baby, giving it up for adoption and having an abortion whether you’re a lesbian, straight, bisexual or about to start F2M treatment.
The last choice proposed in the poll would get from me the response “over my dead body.”
It only means that she might want to talk things over with her partner before making a decision. But that’s only in the same way that a woman with a heterosexual partner that’s been raped would want to talk it over with her husband or SO. In each case, she should have the final say.
The answer is that it’s completely for her to decide, nobody else. Any one of those things could be “right,” depending on individual feelings and circumstances.
The whole thing is so personal, and person-specific, that there isn’t any broad “right” answer.
This. Why wasn’t “Whatever she feels comfortable doing” an option? Whether it’s adoption, abortion, or raising the child, I don’t think anyone else has input (besides her partner, though ultimately, it is the woman’s choice).
It’s not a cop-out. There is no one “best” answer. What’s “best” for me isn’t “best” for your friend’s lesbian partner. For me, checking one of those boxes would be the cop-out, because I’m answering for someone else’s situation, which is inappropriate and useless.
It is very rare that soi-disant general rules actually do any good except to placate the consciences of those persons who should keep their mitts out of other persons’ business.
Does you friend want advice from these people? The good news is, they have identified themselves as jackasses so she can avoid listening to them unless she wants to know what a judgmental idiot would do.
Your friend should do whatever she wants to and thinks is best. There are a lot of serious issues here, but she’s not required to do things any one way as long as she has her and the child’s best interests in mind.