CHENNAI: Veteran actor and Tamil reality show Bigg Boss host Kamal Haasan on Wednesday slammed his critics and said he was not a soft target, and foul words were being spoken every day in society.Speaking to reporters at his Alwarpet office on a day when Hindu Makkal Katchi filed a complaint with the commisoner of police seeking his arrest, the 'Vishwaroopam' star said that he 'trusted the judiciary' and believed it would protect him. The HMK in its complaint said Bigg Boss was airing ' obscene content ' and the show was 'demeaning' Tamil culture. The outfit had also demanded the arrest of the show's 14 contestants.“What is so objectionable about the content in Bigg Boss that is against Tamil culture“, Haasan asked. On the complaint, Haasan said that it was made by people who had a lot of time on their hands. The outfit has a history with Haasan as the group had also targeted the actor in March for what it claimed were “derogatory“ remarks on the Mahabharata.Concerns expressed by social media users about Bigg Boss include the airing of unparliamentary language. The show earned the wrath of netizens after footage of nonTamil speaking contestants fumbling with the words of the Tamil Thai Vaazhtu was aired on a private TV channel. The show earned the wrath of netizens after footage of non-Tamil speaking contestants fumbling with the words of the Tamil Thai Vaazhtu was aired.Asked if the incorrect utterance of the regional anthem had brought disrepute to it, the actor said that it was an attempt to learn the language by non-native speakers.“How many of us would have uttered the words in the national anthem incorrectly? Did we ever consider that as an act of disrepute to the national anthem?“ he said.When asked if he thought he was a soft target for fringe groups, Hassan said, “I am a very hard target. They are throwing darts at me but it won't work. If these allegations had any rationale to it, I would have apologised.“