As a Buddhist, I would most likely still be for abortion. Buddhism itself speaks with more than one moral voice on this issue against abortion. The core belief in Buddhism is against abortion, but there are commonly people of this religion that don't agree with that. For the time in which I will be writing this essay, I am one of those people. Most of my fellow Buddhists believe in the point that you should not be able to choose one life over another. For this reason, abortion cannot be rightly practiced.
Although there are exceptions, Buddhism is still an antiabortion religion, it's just somewhat lenient. Unlike Roman Catholicism, abortion isn't just a flat out "no" in this religion. "The abortion issue usually hinges on whether the fetus is indeed a life in the relevant sense." (Michael Barnhart) In its early stages, a fetus is not considered a human yet to Buddhists. It is alive, but not a human being. Therefore in some cases abortion can be appropriate. "One cannot say that a fertilized egg is a karmically advanced human being just because it is a fertilized egg." (Barnhart) It hasn't even taken human form yet, all that's there is genes. If genes were entirely what made up a person, than abortion would not be acceptable, but that is not the case. In very early stages of a pregnancy, Buddhists don't think of the fetus as a person yet.
I am a Japanese Buddhist. Where I'm from, Buddhism is a little bit different. A lot of Buddhists consider