Poke's answer blames badge-whoring and gamification for thoughtless reviews, but there's another major incentive right there in his post, which he complains about but somehow doesn't recognise as a driving force behind the behaviour of the bad reviewers:
whenever I review stuff, I barely get a vote because ... others already voted it through without thinking much
I share his frustration at this experience, but I get around this (like Omar clearly does) by keeping an eye on all the suggested edits I'm qualified to pass judgement on (about half of which I actually get to vote on in time) and going back to overrule the reviews and revert bad edits that get accepted. Or, less often, to manually reimplement good edits that get perversely rejected, giving credit to the original author in my edit message.
However, it's easy to understand reviewers - especially new reviewers - being really nervous about doing this. What we do when we go back and revert the edits approved by others amounts to deciding to throw away the decision of a democratic process because we think we know better than the collective wisdom of five of our peers.
Let's suppose you're a new, naive, non-Meta-reading reviewer who wants to participate fairly in the review process, without using your new edit powers to overrule others. You click through to your first few tricky edit reviews and think carefully for a few minutes about each of them. What feedback do you get?
You get punished over and over for being too slow. You don't get your vote in in time, so you're denied any voice in the decision at all. Sure, you're not getting your shiny badges, but you're also not helping the site; the time you spent reviewing goes completely to waste. What's more, perhaps you take a look at how long ago the other reviewers made their decisions and see that they voted several minutes before you.
The feedback the review system has given you is that if you want to help, you're going to need to reach your decision faster. We want these suggestions turned over quickly, the site seems to be telling you, and there's no point in even participating in this system if it's going to take you five minutes to review a few lines of code changes.
And so you become part of the problem.