What if my answer to this was ...
Anyone that rejects such an edit also eats kittens for brunch, and eats brunch because they can't possibly wake up on-time after clubbing baby seals all night
Yeah, you'd be more inclined to simply down-vote it. You could also leave a comment saying you felt the answer was good, but didn't feel it was good for the site because of the claim. You could also go on to indicate that you're happy to reverse your vote if the claim was removed.
Sure, editing sort of sends the same signal, but you've got something that someone felt strong enough about to quite deliberately post on a very public site. The answer being a shining example of the culture that we aspire to or not, the edit did change the voice and tone of the answer, which is something that only the author should do.
It's hard to apply a blanket set of guidelines here, it depends on what someone typed in the answer box.
Only [racial slur] that [description of something really offensive] does this sort of thing is a great time to use that 'offensive' button instead of reaching for an edit, because a moderator really needs to see that filth in all its glory so they can launch missiles. If it irritates you but is not flag-worthy, think hard about it being edit-worthy.
Only seriously inept people do this is a good time to use your down vote and (optionally, without unnecessarily antagonizing the author, explain why you did so).
It's a judgement call that takes a little time to learn. Don't worry so much about a negative tone when editing, just make sure that if the answer is down-voted into oblivion, it's not because of the grammar, spelling, lack of paragraph separation, unnecessary formatting, pluralization of a mass noun that is not in-jest and other, you know, important stuff.
If you see negativity without any possibility of usefulness, flag it and it'll quite likely be vaporized.