This is more of an opinion/request than a question.
In my experience comments are widely used to clarify/debate the question, and certainly are useful, for that matter they shouldn't be treated as second class citizens.
I understand that obscene and / or otherwise impermissible comments should be censored out and rendered invisible for the public, I'm only speaking here for the "decent" and permissible ones here.
I consider considerably harmful for the clarity and integrity of the comments for a given question, that they can be edited/deleted by the user at a later time.
People are responding to each others previous comments. This rather takes form of a conversation between commenters as a succession of questions, answers, referrals to previous comments, each comment being relevant and meaningful only in the context of all previous comments as they were at the time of the comment being posted. If comments are allowed to be modified or to be deleted, this invalidates all comments that answer or reflect on the given comment, making them nonsensical for the reader. This compromises the comments section as a whole, rendering it useless, nevertheless it condones unethical user behavior (on a more subtle level), as encourages users to not take responsibility for their comments, hence they can be deleted/edited ulteriorly without a trace.
It would be nice, that user comment edits/deletes merely apply a "strike-through" to the original text to signal that the user corrected it, and for the sake of brevity or for the sake of not cluttering the interface too much with deleted/edited parts we could have a filter that shows/hides these strike-through texts (but it should be clear at all times, that a comment is no longer identical to the original, and a comment once posted should be readable at any given time even if it was deleted [by the user]).
I also understand that the site is about getting precise answers to questions, and not about chatting, but lets not forget that comments are the way of communication between people who ask the questions and people who answer them, so it should be important to keep it sane.