I think that in cases when company chooses to ignore meta in favor of some social media we can consider approach explained in related discussion at MSE (What are the effective communication channels for effecting change to SE?):
Title of your question kind of hints at an answer. One of communication channels to consider for effecting change to SE is to discuss this change in the very same social media channel where it originated from.
Specifically, when Stack Exchange team refer or respond to particular social media post to announce or justify some change in the system our community members can get to that post and discuss it and involved change over there.
One caveat, authors of these originating posts might sometimes get unhappy about received feedback from our community. I heard that was the case with two recent changes ("welcoming" and blocking IPS from hot questions).
But I guess it should be responsibility of SE employees to consider consequences when they choose to hijack particular social media post and turn it into change announcement / justification.
For example, in case of an edit discussed in one of the linked questions, we could get to the Twitter of a person who convinced company employee overrule community decision and clarify these matters with this person.
See also: Twitter-driven development
impression that Twitter is a better place to propose changes and features for the Stack Exchange network than the respective Meta sites