I enjoyed both the Loin King and Pocahontas as well, but one really does have to be willing to see what is painfully obvious. Both movies celebrated ‘new age’ religion over anything close to a “good vs evil” Christian worldview. For the Loin King, I was willing to let the emphasis on animism and the Baboon Shaman slide as a ‘nod’ to African culture (it is a movie that takes place in Africa and is about African animals).
In the case of Pocahontas, it is Disney that was engaged in “cancel culture” since the story of the REAL Pocahontas (who was a real person) is one of her helping the settlers, converting to Christianity upon learning the truth and becoming the toast of European Courts as a voice for Jesus as the savior of all people. The movie presented ignorant Christians that needed to learn animism (spirit worship) from the natives and suggested that the settlers converted to the Indian worship of “Mother Earth”. When you create a historic tale that reverses history, you are engaged in propaganda rather than entertainment.
Honey I Shrunk the Kids was just too silly for me, so I didn’t watch it (but I don’t like Toy Story either) … so that is just personal taste and not an axe to grind.