I'm yet to see this, so can't offer an opinion. However, I will say this: I believe "Disney's feral attempts at inclusivity" are misguided. In my not remotely humble opinion, a story should first and foremost simply be a good story without making self-conscious, virtue-signalling attempts to appease the representation police, because more often than not, they come off as condescending and sanctimonious.
Writers who simply have the motivation to tell a good story will find what is important to them becomes inherent in the material in any case, and those are the stories that become important in terms of representation, etc. But the storytelling aspect needs to be approached organically.
I often roll my eyes at transparently crass attempts at inclusivity, because they often have nothing to do with the story or indeed reality. When I watch a series featuring a cast of young people that boast a scrupulously diverse cast racially, and in terms of people's sexual preferences, gender identities, etc, I laugh, because it simply isn't reality (unless you happen to live in certain areas of the West Coast). It's a cynical box-ticking exercise.
Include diverse characters by all means, but make them absolutely integral to the narrative. For example: In series two of Locke and Key, Duncan is revealed to be engaged to another man. This gay lover character then disappears from the story, and is totally irrelevant, other than a bit of pointless virtue-signalling. By contrast, the lesbian presenter in The Morning Show is a fully-formed, realistic, complex character who has an intergral part of the ongoing narrative. Not once did I get a whiff of virtue signalling from that programme.
That's obviously a slightly different issue to what you describe in Ms Marvel, and as I said, I've not seen the programme yet. But it is entirely possible to write a narrative around Pakistani-Muslim culture that is entertaining, compelling, sympathetic, informative, and without an iota of condescension. Example: The British film East is East (not about superheroes, but a damned entertaining film, one of the best that year).