Once the user has reached 2K reputation and earned the Edit PrivilegeEdit Privilege, then they should feel free to make such mass edits as long as they're consistent with the rules and community consensus. If someone is unclear about what the rules or consensus is, then they should check with meta prior to embarking on a mass edit.
The reasons against that have been brought up to boil down to these points, which I will address:
Every time we edit a post, the post jumps to the top of the Active list. Some people like to use the Active list as a way to review post quality, and this can hinder them by overloading the list with a lot of simple edits.
I personally don't bother using the Active list, because I don't care about it anyways. But this is an issue I believe we can work around. Some potential workarounds:
- Stop 3rd party edits from bumping posts
- Stop 3rd party edits from bumping posts and create a review queue where we can approve or reject edits. Not all edits should show up. Let's say a user has 2K reputation. Perhaps there is a 75% chance that their edit will show up in this review queue. Let's say a user has 5K reputation, we trust them a bit more so let's assign a 25% chance that their reviews will show up in the queue. For users over 10K, we can assume they know what they're doing and maybe we'll only assign a 1% chance that their edit will show up in the queue.
- Only allow edits from low reputation users to bump the Active list.
- Assign an arbitrary number of characters that must be edited (let's say 30) prior to it allowing a post to be dumped to the top.
My bottom line is that once a user reaches a certain level of reputation, we should trust the to make positive edits without the need to watch over their shoulder unless they give us reason to believe otherwise.
Removing fluff does not improve posts
Sorry, I disagree. Removing fluff makes it easier to focus on the question. And that appears to be the community consensus.
Spending time to do mass edits to remove fluff is a waste of time
Perhaps it's not time well spent. Perhaps we should learn Mandarin or learn to salsa dance instead of removing fluff from posts. But we obviously think fluff should be removed. I don't think it's the job of StackOverflow to dictate how your time should be spent. Time spent removing fluff doesn't necessarily compete with time you can spend doing other site maintenance tasks. If we believe it's worth it to do singly, we should believe it's worth it to do in mass.
Edits must be substantial
Why, other than the Active list churning issue which I've already addressed. We've agreed that removing fluff should be done. And an edit to remove fluff doesn't prevent a later edit that could be more substantial. It actually allows whoever does the later edit to focus on the bigger problems rather than removing the fluff.
What is really boils to to me is "if the edit is good, then it belongs".