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Rubio reminds voters: fertilized human eggs don't become cats

Marco Rubio, who wanted to adopt the posture of some kind of wonk, is now pushing a bold, new campaign message: fertilized human eggs don't develop into cats.
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio speaks with the media on May 28, 2015, in Las Vegas, Nev. (Photo by John Locher/AP)
Republican presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio speaks with the media on May 28, 2015, in Las Vegas, Nev.
Hillary Clinton fielded some questions from campaign reporters yesterday, and not surprisingly, she was asked about Donald Trump. But the Democratic frontrunner clearly had a different group of Republicans on her mind.
 
"I think if we focus on [Trump's antics], we're making a mistake," she said. "What a lot of the men on that stage in that debate said was offensive." Highlighting Sen. Marco Rubio's (R-Fla.) recent comments on prohibiting all abortions, regardless of circumstances, Clinton added, "[T]he language [Trump uses] may be more colorful and more offensive, but the thinking, the attitude toward women, is very much the same."
 
She went on to say. 'What Marco Rubio said has as much of an impact in terms of where the Republican Party is today as anybody else on that stage."
 
It's an important point. Rubio has now argued, more than once, that if a woman is impregnated by a rapist, the government has the authority to force her to take the pregnancy to term, regardless of her wishes. For Clinton, this matters every bit as much -- if not more -- than Trump's ugly remarks about Fox's Megyn Kelly.
 
For his part, Rubio seems to think he has a winner on his hands. Yesterday, the far-right Floridian, using social media and his campaign website, even launched a new initiative, alongside a big picture of a cat:

"Watch this video and sign this petition if you know that a human life won't become a donkey or a cat."

Yes, Marco Rubio, who last week seemed to adopt the posture of some kind of wonk, is now pushing a bold, new campaign message: fertilized human eggs don't develop into cats.
 
As for the video Rubio is eager for the public to see, Slate's Amanda Marcotte has the backstory:

When Rubio appeared on CNN after Thursday night's Republican debate, he kept insisting that this vague entity called "science" has declared that human life begins at conception. (Actual biologists, for what it's worth, argue that life is continuous and that a fertilized egg is no more or less alive than a sperm or an unfertilized egg.) CNN host Chris Cuomo vainly tried to point out that "science" says no such thing, and Rubio got a little excited. "Let me interrupt you. Science has -- absolutely it has. Science has decided... Science has concluded that -- absolutely it has. What else can it be?" he asked. Then Rubio reared up for what he clearly intended as his wowza line: "It cannot turn into an animal. It can't turn into a donkey. The only thing that that can become is a human being."

Rubio, clearly pleased with himself, added, "[If scientists] can't say it will be human life, what does it become, then? Could it become a cat?"
 
When Rubio's website says "watch this video," it shows the interview in its entirety.
 
Just so we're clear, not even the most ardent pro-choice advocates believe fertilized human eggs could become a cat. They do believe, however, that there's a difference between people and fertilized human eggs that might someday become people -- in much the same way we differentiate between acorns and trees. What something is and what something may become under the right conditions are not identical.
 
Nevertheless, the far-right Floridian seems quite excited about his argument. He'll have to hope it's persuasive to a broad audience -- Rubio's no-abortions/no-exceptions position is further to the right than any Republican presidential nominee in the modern era.