The low number of suggested edits being left in the queue after the launch of the beta review system is obviously not as good a sign as we may have thought, and one of the contributing factors to both that problem and the one presented here is the lack of effort required on the reviewer's part. But at the same time, the beta review system is contributing to the lack of effort. It's really a hilarious catch-22.
But the problem doesn't lie only in the fact that no effort is needed to approve an edit, but also in the fact that the users making the suggestions don't really know what they're doing.
I just saw this suggested edit, and I don't know who to blame. Do I blame the reviewers for doing an awful job, or the suggester for making an edit that detracts from the post (the URL references threw me off in the rendered view...only the markdown view gave me an understanding of the strange situation).
So it becomes an issue of who to educate better. In the above case, I lean more towards the suggester—with better knowledge of markdown, that edit could have been pretty helpful (to me, at least; linking to documentation is always good). The intent of the edit was helpful, and from first glance, I can see why the reviewers approved it (they don't have a particularly bad approval history).
But then you have cases like this suggested edit which replaced a link to one of a YouTube video...and got approved. In this case, I obviously lean towards the reviewers. God knows what crossed through their heads, and it was more than likely an effort towards keeping the queue clear (though I don't see why that would be beneficial to them, since there is no reward for approval).
So we're at an impasse—I don't believe there is one consistent way in which we could eliminate the problem in terms of educating users better. Plus, I think whatever systems we have in place for helping users learn the system are helpful enough.
But I'd like to bring up the argument about whether there is a correlation between high reputation and good reviewing skills. A user here argues that the correlation doesn't exist, that a user can get enough rep to approve/reject without having edited once.
This is true, sure, but chew on this: the only other way to earn reputation is by asking good questions and posting good answers (and suggesting tag wiki edits if below 5000, but +2 is inconsequential). Both of those are indicators—to me, at least—that someone knows what makes up a good question/answer, and that I could trust them approving good edits and rejecting bad ones.
But 2000 rep is definitely not a high enough threshold to determine whether a user really understands the difference between a good and bad question/answer. So my proposal would be to raise the reputation needed to review suggested edits (and, in turn, since the two privileges are associated, the reputation needed to edit freely) to 5000. At this threshold, we can at least minimize the number of bad reviewers (because 5000+ tells me that they have a pretty good question/answer quality history) and the number of bad edits approved.
(And in case anyone brings it up, I'm pretty sure this user, who approved the spam YouTube edit, is either compromised or did it purely for kicks...the world may never know).