During one interview she said he asked her about her breast size.
Jean Cross, whose disabled brother has attended the centre for 43 years, told BBC Radio WM it would be a "big upheaval" for users and she would not give up protesting until they "put the chains on the gates" of the centre.She was also worried about planned cuts to children's and social services.
"If you're housebound and you have carers going in full-time three or four times a day and they are cut down to twice a day I do fear that people will lose their lives over these cuts," she said.The most vulnerable people in society were being affected, Ms Cross added."Carers need to be looked after and people need to see the money we save councils and governments," she said.
NHS Western Isles says some patients are having planned operations postponed due to a lack of bed space in Western Isles Hospital in Stornoway, Lewis.A meeting of the health board heard the problem was due to the delayed discharge of patients from the hospital.
Chief executive Gordon Jamieson said the Western Isles currently had the highest level of delayed discharge in Scotland per head of population.
The meeting heard there was a lack of staff available to provide care at home packages and a shortage of care home places.“This is a field that has come along, and just because they're recording their crypto assets on a new accounting ledger, they [wrongly] say ‘we don't think we want to comply with the time-tested laws’,” says Mr Gensler.
He explains that rules that force companies that want to raise money from the public to “share certain information” with them have been in place to protect investors since the SEC was created.This was back in 1934, in the aftermath of the infamous Wall Street crash of 1929 that heralded the Great Depression.
“Crypto is just a small piece of the US and worldwide capital markets, but it can undermine trust that everyday investors have in the capital markets,” says Mr Gensler.While fans argue that crypto offers a fast, cheap and secure way to move funds, a survey by the US central bank, the Federal Reserve, found that the number of Americans using it has dropped