If it were just the clothes, I’d probably agree. There’s more to this than clothes though, IMO.
And dressing this way and asking the kids to think in terms of the opposite sex, which is undoubtedly going to be part of the lesson plan, can do real harm.
Not only this they take recess away from boys who must have it for social manly growth. And they essentially brow beat the manliness out of them in every other way too.
These young boys are being turned into girls.
I fully agree with you on the school's agenda, which seems to be part of the overall liberal agenda to emasculate males and not only suppress masculine behavior in boys but make it seem like some sort of disease (i.e. ADD). I was speaking only about the clothes, which (outside of dress codes in school or the workplace) is up to the individual. Men don't have to dress up like lumberjacks all the time to prove they are men. On the other hand, women don't have to go around wearing frilly dresses all the time to be feminine and I'll state my case below.