Instead of a simple warning message, I suggest adding a checkbox asking if the user who is editing want their edit to put the post in the reopen queue. Something like this:
This would make it possible to make minor edits to closed questions without putting them in the reopen queue. Although in your specific example the question is completely worthless and trivial edits to that question are therefore useless, there are other examples where the question should remain closed but is actually useful.
This is especially true for duplicates, duplicates are worth keeping since they make it easier to search for the question, and therefore grammar edits to them would be useful, even though they should remain closed. For example (there are probably better examples, I found this one with a quick search), this question is clearly a duplicate, but it has a few issues that would be nice to correct (uncapitalized "i", "plz" instead of "please", "Modulus
" isn't code, etc). The question has 17 upvotes and is worth keeping, the only issue with it is that it's a duplicate. It would be nice to edit this question without placing it in the reopen queue.
The checkbox would only be enabled when the current criteria for edits that put the question in the reopen queue are met. For example, this checkbox wouldn't exist on questions that have already been trough the reopen queue because of a previous edit. Also, since only body edits can place questions in the reopen queue, the checkbox can be disabled until the user edits the body (or alternatively it can show an error message when the user checks the checkbox without editing the body).
This checkbox can be checked by default if the user clicks on the edit link from the close banner (to make it more user-friendly for new users), and unchecked by default if the user clicks on the regular edit button (to avoid users carelessly leaving the checkbox checked when it shouldn't be).
Also, to address the issue about minor edits wasting the OP's chance to improve their question and get it reopened, the first edit with the checkbox checked will put the question in the reopen queue (instead of the first edit at all). For example, if someone makes a minor edit and doesn't check the checkbox and then someone else (probably the OP) fixes the critical issues and checks the checkbox, the second edit will put the question in the reopen queue (and of course the first one won't). Also, no edits will put the question in the reopen queue after the first edit with the checkbox checked.