Personally, I only use the 'too minor' rejection reason as a euphemism for "I'm not actually convinced that this is an improvement" or "Some of your changes make this post better, some make it worse, and I don't care enough to unpick them because none of them matters very much." Since fairly early in my reviewing days, I've never rejected a genuinely good but minor edit for being too minor.
I've never understood what the purpose of doing so is (or even what edits qualify; there's a total lack of discussion, as far as I've been able to discover, on where the threshold is), and what other reviewers do is totally inconsistent. I've seen major rewrites of broken English into something comprehensible, or code formatting changes needed to make the post remotely readable, both rejected as 'too minor', and had to go and reimplement these changes myself because they were vital if the post was to be salvaged into something useful to anybody. I've also seen suggestions that did nothing but change a word for a synonym accepted. If the plan is to impose a standard threshold of minor-ness at which things get rejected, then on the whole we're just utterly failing.
Additionally, while I realise that minor edits causing post-bumping is a genuine issue, I'm utterly taken aback by the assertion from Servy and Kate Gregory that rejecting minor edits is supposed to save reviewers time. Frankly, I think it does precisely the opposite. I assumed that the rejection of minor edits was just supposed to ensure that the ease of gaining rep via minor edits didn't end up disincentivizing people from making more substantial edits.
Reviewing a substantial edit - that heavily rewrites a piece of prose, or makes a non-trivial code change - usually takes me at least a minute or two, and requires me to read and understand the entire post being edited. For edits complicated enough that I have to do research to determine the edit's correctness, it's roughly as much of an investment of effort as making the change myself would be. On the other hand, reviewing a bunch of typo fixes can literally be done in 5 to 10 seconds, and - unlike more serious edits - the time cost doesn't scale with the length or complexity of the post being edited.
The only thing that used to cost me time when reviewing minor edits - before I gave up on rejecting them - was trying to figure out whether they were 'too minor' or not. As soon as I have to answer that, suddenly I need to think. Does this grammar fix significantly affect readability? Was this typo going to leave people unsure about what was meant? Or are these changes frivolous? I once again need to understand some context, and besides passing judgement on whether the edit is good I've got this whole extra layer of judgement I'm supposed to make - with pretty much zero guidance on where the thresholds are - on whether it's done enough good, or just a little bit of good. That's a much more demanding call than just going "yep, the grammar was wrong and now it's right. Accept."
And for what? For starters, it seems to me that Kate Gregory and others who reject these edits will never succeed at reducing them by even half of what they are today, even if everybody tries to support them in it. These suggested edits come from low-rep (i.e. relatively new) users, and therefore churn is built into the system - there will always be new new users to replace the old new users, and unlike closed questions, rejected suggestions are pretty much invisible to anybody except the suggester and reviewers, so your efforts won't set an example to the next generation. You can't build long-lasting behaviour changes with suggested edit reviews - you can at most hope to influence the user who made the suggestion, and often not even them.
And if the rejecters did succeed at making such a drastic reduction? Like Kate, I can only speak for myself, but I'm pretty certain that even if I got the experience to be much quicker at it than I am today, seriously weighing up whether something was 'too minor' would still take several times as long as determining the correctness of a handful of spelling or grammar changes does. At least in my case, you'd need to reduce the number of minor edits by an implausibly large factor before the time it would take me to review them as you'd like me to would be less than the time it takes to just check they're correct and click them through. Perhaps others have had a drastically different experience to me, but early on when I was reviewing figuring out whether edits - perfectly valid, correct edits that made posts better - should be rejected as 'too minor' or not was sucking up a large proportion of my reviewing time, and was the most un-fun part of the entire process. Accepting them wastes drastically less of my time and doesn't cause me the same level of stress and doubt.
As a final aside, I find bad English in posts distracting, even if there are only a few instances of it and it's possible to piece together the meaning without much effort. As such, I don't find edits that fix it close-to-worthless as others here seem to.
If there is no ambiguity, there is no need to change it.
- very much an opinion. Grammar is, on the whole, right or wrong. There is every reason to change bad spelling/ grammar, especially as it should help non-native speakers.