Yesterday, I noticed that one of the non-salvageable questions I had contributed towards closure was edited to no longer include its original content (it was something along the lines of "I just searched over the internet and found the answers that I was looking for"). I reverted the edit and posted a comment to warn that this isn't good conduct for the site. The reply ended up not being so good.
Of course, one could draw some various remarks from this exchange. The comment was terser than the OP had wished. I also know that I did not have to comment, and that I'm bound to find toxicity sooner or later from this. I never really checked my brain's volume either.
However, I would like to focus on the word "vandalizing". Saying that the question or answer was vandalized did not strike me as something directly insulting to say. In fact, it's often employed for this sort of issue here on Meta, and my own comment was based on one which is publicly hosted in a list for automatic comments. The original would have read like this:
Please do not vandalize your posts. By posting on the Stack Exchange network, you've granted a non-revocable right for SE to distribute that content (under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license). By SE policy, any vandalism will be reverted.
Given the circumstances, and just to be sure: is it appropriate to use the word "vandalize" or its variants for inappropriate modifications to questions and answers? What other ways can we portray the same meaning, or warn the user not to do this?