The point of closing is not to stop editing. In fact, closing vague, ambiguous, or rhetorical questions is often done to help prompt edits and clarifications. A question that is bad will not get good answers if it's left open and is still bad. I like Aarobot's explanation on Seasoned Advice, which comes with a cute analogy if you know cooking. ♪
Vague/subjective questions are like a big pile of raw ground chuck. You want to make hamburgers, but just realized that you don't have any onions in the house, or eggs, or flour, or salt, or any of the things that are normally required to make a hamburger from scratch. What do you do?
Well, you can raid the pantry and start throwing a bunch of random crap into the pan with it and see if it comes out OK once it's cooked. It probably won't, though. Or, you can freeze it, go and get the ingredients you need, and then thaw it when you're actually ready to cook it.
So that's what we're doing here. When we close a question, we're saying that it can't be answered well because it's missing details (ingredients). Once those details are added, we can pick up where we left off. On the other hand, if that never happens, and the question just sits around forever and goes rancid, then we will actually delete it, and that is generally final.
As far as there being a lot more closers, remember that everyone closing is also capable of reopening - you have just as many people capable of reversing the closure post-clarification. Remember, we're not closing unclear and vague questions because we simply dislike them. Many closers will happily wait for a question to be salvaged, and will assist in reopening the question.