Although he formally former minister and member of parliament, so devises Søren Pind (49) still brand new political ideas.

Now, he suggests that the Danish media should be able to hit on the purse – that is punished – if there are band or used another form of ‘uhøvisk language’ in articles, radio or tv programmes. The aim is a large-scale restoration of the language and the people.

It must therefore be able to cost licenskroner or media support, if not the media ekskommunikerer the vulgar content. Danish has been overfed and vulgar – and ‘as a language as people’, writes Søren Pind in a comment on b.dk.

’All media, as taxpayers, contribute to, should as a prerequisite be asked to lead a courtly language and banishing vulgariteterne. The parliament should discuss and implement a linguistic recovery’, suggests local jurisdictions, which are emptied of the forces left Danish politics last spring.

But the political thoughts flowing therefore from the long-standing venstremands hjernelapper.

Apparently it was a concrete meeting with a mother and her three children on Strøget in Copenhagen, which was Søren Stick to the keys.

the Woman’s children cried out: the ’abominable’ F-words in the open street, which blew Pinds walk from Kongens Nytorv to Rådhuspladsen.

Søren Pind acknowledges that he even gangs in the radio, which earlier was him ’inconceivable’.

A bad habit of holding that Stick, however, not entirely its own fault. It was introduced by the CD leader Mimi Jakobsen. She’s cursing and sulphurised in the media’ to show ’its popular and crude side’. However, without the saving of his party (CD) from slipping out of the Parliament, emphasises Søren Pind, who himself prefers a poetic, embracing and beautiful Danish ’ends like a glove’.

If vulgariteterne fills in the Danish language, so are the people and the Danish culture also vulgar, says Peg.

Ekstra Bladet has tried in vain to get a comment or an in-depth interview with Søren Pind.

subject to Søren Pind pt. is former, as he writes himself into the current set of politicians, who almost simultaneously will detailstyre and restrict the right to certain speech – possibly even legislate on specific word usage and use.

trade and industry minister, Rasmus Jarlov (K), complaining, for example, earlier this month publicly that the ’younger radio hosts’ supposedly ‘consistent’ uses a wrong word about musicians and singers. (the article continues under the picture)

the Danish people’s party member of the European Parliament, Morten Messerschmidt, has also recently in an op-ed suggested that the school children should say the hr. or mrs. for the teacher, which of course is not a ‘friend, you are familiar with’.

the President of the Danish union of journalists, Lars Werge, look with concern on politicians ‘ growing need to curb the press’s freedom. He stresses that he in the present context, perceive Søren Pind as a politician. Partly because the Peg is selected to sit in the Parliament in this session and still uses his Telegraph column to clear political statements.

– here is yet another attempt of political interference in media freedom. The politicians shuns no means. We have just seen the minister of trade Rasmus Jarlov (K) do it. We see it also with the Danish people’s party, the attack on Radio24Syv and the socialist criticism of the free press, says Lars Werge.

– There is a clear political desire to interfere. There is a free hunt on the media redigeringsret. In the Danish union of journalists are we nervous that political pressure affects the journalists and editors. So we put unnecessary constraints on ourselves. The parties should uphold the freedom of the press instead of damaging it, warns journalistformanden.