@Cecilia is right to be weary of preserving the OP's voice and the importance of that voice in the spirit of a more conversational style. These things are what makes this site friendly [read: fun and engaging for new (and some old) users]. I think editing grammar, fixing spelling mistakes, and re-styling are all net positives with no downside. Subjective "fluff" moderation will definitely lead to edits being done for the purpose of editing, as exemplified by many comments in this question. The idea that @cHao makes regarding how an edit made with next to no net positive impact, a very minor change, is likely a net negative rings true. You remove the independence from the author and provide nothing in return except a removal of things that, in my opinion, are often warm-welcoming.
I think the strong, opinionated responses in this question are skewed towards the meta user base and I find this to be the case on many meta posts. Meta users tend to only be super-users, and thus are far removed from what it's like being a newcomer (no small portion of the overall SO user base). "Fluff" inclusion can convey more than black and white answers. When you are new, seeing that someone else has experienced immense frustration over a question can alleviate imposter syndrome, build a sense of hope, and rebuild confidence. Seeing appreciation leads to having appreciation. To me it's like an efficient back end for a web-app: it doesn't really matter how efficient it is if nobody wants to use it. Balance is key and if these things [small aforementioned humanisms] are removed for the sole sake of removing them, providing no grammatical benefit or readability improvement, then it begs the question: Why remove it at all? Why not let the user have a voice and become someone who wants to partake in the community. Making an edit without regards to net positive impact does nothing to enhance the user experience and likely removes from it.
Grammatical errors, spelling mistakes, readability obfuscations, excessive gripes... I don't think anyone here is arguing for keeping these... That we can all agree on, and that's where I think the line should be drawn.
"tried searching around a bit, and haven't been able to come up with a usable answer"
to their question, regardless of whether they actually did or not, I put absolutely no weight on that statement (and would thus classify it as fluff).