the military takeover there. we start in the uk, which has seen the biggest day of strike action in more than a decade, according to the unions, with up to half a million people walking out in disputes over pay, jobs and conditions. among those striking are train drivers from the aslef union impacting most train companies across england. bus drivers in london about 100,000 civil servants from over a hundred government departments. thousands of university staff from 150 universities across the uk. and teachers from the national education union. these aerial images show demonstrators marching past the bbc s headquarters in london. 0ur employment correspondent was with them nearby at whitehall. the scale of this. this is the biggest straight for more than a decade. there has been some sort of talk about, could this be the general strike? it is not that. there are unions who have decided not to strike today. it certainly could be a lot bigger. what s interesting is there are un
nichols i have the activists names written down, i have the activists names written down, and i have the activists names written down, and i i have the activists names written down, and i will think them, i have the activists names written down, and i willthink them, if i have the activists names written down, and i will think them, if you would down, and i will think them, if you would hand down, and i will think them, if you would hand that to ever in doubt, and i would hand that to ever in doubt, and i want would hand that to ever in doubt, and i want to think some of the national and i want to think some of the national activists who didn t think it robbery national activists who didn t think it robbery to come. i know to come. i it robbery to come. i know to come. i know it robbery to come. i know to come. i know tamika mallory and also thank you, reverend al, we have got casio montes you, reverend al, we have got casio montes. paula barris. we ve got hunter mo
we got kazuo montez, we got paula barris, we got hunter dempster and aaron sherman en. l. jay abraham and frank gotti and pam moses, we wouldn t be here without you activists, so thank you. w50e8d not be here. a lot of times we acknowledge the people in high positions, but it s the people who on the ground on the front line like you taught me, reverend al, who make the difference. so let me just be as constrained as i can and give the call to action. i do so on behalf of my co-counsels, antonio rom unusual chi, ernestine and van turner,
0 something, i don t know what you writing on social media. i know what i saw on the tape. and the tape speaks for itself. they never asked this man for his license. never asked for the car registration. snatched him out of the car and began beating him. nobody mentioned nothing about no girlfriend. nobody mentioned nothing about no they started beating an unarmed man. tell em. in the city that they slayed the dreamer, what has happened to the dream? in the city where the dreamer laid down and shed his blood, you have the unmitigated gall to beat your brother, chase him down and beat him some more, call for backup and they take 20 minutes. and you watch him and you were too busy talking among each other, no empathy, no concern. if you read the story of joseph, when his brothers threw him in the pit, nobody came to help him like nobody came to help tyre. waiting on ambulance service that didn t show up until it s too late. what will happen to his dream? well, we ll just tell them s