What on EARTH are you rambling about? Really, because I have no clue what your problem is. Visiting the Norway pavilion as a child introduced me to the culture, as someone unfamiliar with Norwegian culture prior I liked what I saw (not just the troll parts) and so chose to learn more (and shock, things unrelated to trolls).
It's not a difficult concept to grasp and certainly a ridiculous thing for you to be so upset about and I daresay offended by... What problem do you have with this and why are you so seemingly shocked and appalled by it? Visiting a lot of the other World Showcase pavilions were my first taste of other cultures outside of the US as well (before actually learning much about them or even having the good fortune of visiting some of them in person).
It's sad to see the countries being tainted with Disney's IP's let loose on the place to engulf everything, this was not what the creators of the park wanted and in fact something they were adamant and careful about avoiding getting out of control (which is why at the beginning even meet and greets with Disney characters was so rare or even unheard of). The rest of your comment above I have no idea how to respond to, it's practically incoherent babbling.
It doesn't take a genius to know that MOST kids aren't going to be interested in Frozen's ties to Norway, this isn't rocket science or even complex child psychology here. A few parents here and there perhaps might take notice of the loose connections to the culture, but when you've got a little girl (or even a boy, i'm not judging here) throwing a fit to get an Elsa or Olaf doll after riding and exiting through the inevitable Frozen IP gift shop, I doubt even those few parents are going to bother.
No one said ANY of that. Or anything even remotely close to it. Ever. Period. Thank you for another unsuccessful attempt at a straw man though.
What was stated was that Maelstrom was MY first taste at Norway and its culture as a child. It is not remotely the only way to introduce yourself to the culture, but it was MY first glimpse and my inspiration for delving further. The pavilion was distinctly Norway, so I took away an intrigue at learning more about Norwegian culture. Quite simple really. Frozen (good though the movie is) is a very poor and inaccurate representation Norwegian (or Scandinavian in general) culture. I'd consider it a very unfortunate way for people unfamiliar with the culture to be introduced to it. Fantasyland is where it belongs and should have gone from the beginning. Had we only the good fortune of caring, competent and overall rational people running the parks. As well as executives who had any faith in their movie to begin with to foresee its popularity and build a good and appropriately placed ride around it.
As stated before, trolls are only part of the ride. The first several show scenes are historical scenes of Nowegian culture. Folklore and myths just happen to have very deep roots in their culture. That's rather true of any culture really. Same as the Greeks, Romans, Egyptians etc with their famous gods and mythical stories. And i'd hardly be likely to (or want to) ignore their fascinating stories when presented in a respectable and appropriate manner. Myths and gods are often (pretty much always) at the root of cultures and civilizations, religion in particular (and folklore) is usually the foundations civilizations (both great and small) are built around.
Frozen once again does not represent Norwegian culture or folklore adequately, it's a Danish fairy tale tweaked by Disney to take place in a fictional kingdom of unknown location on earth. Still with only extremely vague and sparsely scattered Scandinavian influences, all shoved to the side to focus on a queen with magical ice powers and a snowman that sings about summer. Not an entirely unwelcome concept for a Disney movie, or a Fantasyland ride. But quite a poor and even inappropriate way to showcase and pay tribute to authentic Norwegian culture.