In the words of Walt, "Too many people grow up. Thats the real trouble with the world, too many people grow up. They forget. They dont remember what its like to be twelve years old. They patronize; they treat children as inferiors. I wont do that. Ill temper a story, yes. But I wont play down, and I wont patronize."
I completely understand your (the OP's) disappointment. However, I have to say that I'd rather a child know that is an actor than think it's a real five foot mouse, simultaneously appearing all over the world. What pains me is when someone takes this knowledge and dismisses characters as pointless.
We know that animated characters are just drawings with an actor providing a voice. Disney promotes this knowlege all the time. But does knowing Aladdin is a fictional character make his story any less interesting? There are plenty of promotional pics of Cinderella Castle being constructed, yet is it any less magical?
What makes the walk around characters, and all of WDW, so much fun is that we can suspend our disbelief and lose ourselves in fantasy. So even though the characters aren't "real" per se, they are really purchased on all kinds of merchandise. They really bring smiles to kids and adults alike. They really are the subject of a million message board threads. As the book Kingdom Keepers describes, after enough people believe in a character, they sort of
become real.
As long as your kids can understand the difference between "fantasy magic" and the "real magic" the characters provide guests every day, you have nothing to worry about.
