Jaden Smith, the cross-dressing teen son of Will and Jada Pinkett Smith, doesn’t see the big fuss about men wearing feminine clothing and hopes to transform the world into a “utopia,” in part by freeing people from bills and other financial obligations.
In a recent interview for the upcoming edition of British GQ Style, the 17-year-old said, “I don’t see man clothes and woman clothes.”
“I feel like people are kind of confused about gender norms. I feel like people don’t really get it. I’m not saying that I get it,” Smith continued. “I’m just saying that I’ve never seen any distinction. I don’t see man clothes and woman clothes, I just see scared people and comfortable people.”
The Hollywood scion, who previously compared himself to Italian astronomer Galileo and announced plans to build an Egyptian-style pyramid, also told GQ he wants to make the world “a utopia.”
“I’m really working towards just fixing the whole planet Earth. I really just want to create a utopia on this planet. I really want to make it so that people don’t have to die to pay bills and just work to survive.”
Smith added: “So that they can work to actually live and do the things that they love to do.”
Jade Smith was introduced as the new face of Louis Vuitton’s Spring/Summer 2016 women’s collection, back in January. Weeks later, he appeared in a gender fluid fashion ad for Vogue Korea.
The teen perviously told GQ skirts and dresses make him feel like a “super hero.”
I’m just expressing how I feel inside, which is really no particular way because everyday it changes how I feel about the world and myself, but I like wearing super drapey things so I can feel as though I’m a super hero, but don’t have to necessarily wear super hero costumes everyday.
Jaden’s father, Will Smith, described his son as “fearless” last month — but also surrendered that he and his wife “may have gone too far” in allowing their children the freedom to express themselves.
The Concussion star concluded: “Jaden is 100 percent fearless. He will do anything. As a parent it’s scary – it’s really terrifying, but he is completely willing to live and die by his own artistic decisions and he doesn’t concern himself with what people think.”