The ride has no connection to the problem parts of the film, the live action segments. If you’ve seen the film, you’d know that the animated sequences aren’t remotely dependent on the live action story, but the morals taught in the animated segments have an impact on the live action segments. This is why people who’ve watched the film (back in the 40s up to today), hate it, and think it’s racist STILL say they liked the animated sections.
It is very easy to separate the Brer Rabbit stories from the awkward live action missteps because they are very clearly separated in the film.
For his second point, he isn’t being contradictory. The live action parts of the film were completely made up by Disney in the 40s. The animated segments were not. They’re adaptations of the African American folktales. And as I’ve said MANY times, when Disney adapts stories, they involuntarily bear the burden of representing these stories for the modern audience. Disney says Brer Rabbit is racist (because they don’t see an easy path to market it with the mess they’ve made), then EVERYONE thinks the character is racist.
You may think I’m wrong, but the immediate dismissal by so many people proves my point. Nobody has easy access to these stories. There’s no Disney film they can watch. So it just becomes a giant game of telephone. All it takes is a bit of research, but most people barely care enough about the topic to take that time.