I wouldn't mind a rewrite, but I'd rather see it better discourage future edits in the same vein
does not help post quality
Edits should be avoided if they are only fixing minor problems or ignoring post quality. The post can either stand as-is, or it needs a more significant edit
That avoids being confrontational, while explaining what we're trying to avoid by selecting that reason. As to your comment
Every time I have to select this answer, I feel rude/dramatic. The description seems to imply that the editor was too dumb to improve the post even a little bit or that their intent was actually malicious. Both reasons seem too intense for an action, that in reality, was likely just to offer some help.
Not all attempts at help are actually helpful. In curation circles we revile the "polishing turds" edits. If a question was closed for lacking a minimal reproducible example, a simple edit making grammatical fixes isn't useful. In fact, it's actually the opposite, because now you're throwing the edited question into the reopen queue. As such, the edit not only failed to fix the problem, it made more work needlessly. I've seen people edit spam to be "helpful" instead of flagging it. We need correction there. That was the original goal
Sadly, [hostile action is] sometimes necessary - for whatever reason, folks submit edits that are pointless, or worse... But if you don't think the edit you're looking at matches that description, then either don't reject it, or use a different reason.
If it does fall into that bucket, then let's call a spade a spade: being "nice" does not mean obscuring your intent when you must chide someone; that doesn't benefit anyone.