tl;dr
Today my opinion on this subject has completely flipped and I think this is a good change. The "too minor" reason was addressing a problem that didn't really exist.
Longer version
I used to be in favour of rejecting minor edits, because it grated me that people didn't fix glaring issues with the post. It also annoyed me that they were "rep hunting". However, when I analysed the common objections to this habit I struggled to find anything substantial:
Trivial edits waste reviewers' time
Perhaps I'm missing something, but the edit review queue is nearly always empty. Presumably feeding on that queue are people intent on doing good and/or earning reviewer badges. It doesn't seem like there's a problem here.
They are just hunting the +2 rep
This used to bother me, but I've decided I might just be happier if I don't care. If someone really wants to get to 1000 reputation by doing minor edits, then I just feel sorry for them. They'll need an additional 1000 "normal" reputation before they are free to edit on their own.
They fix the trivial stuff and miss the big obvious problem
Yes, that's annoying. And yes, that's not how I would edit. But it doesn't prevent someone doing a better job later.
Without the "too minor" reason, the robo-reviewers will just get worse
Well... part of the reason we don't like those robo-reviewers is because they approved trivial edits rather than rejecting them as "too minor". But asides from this, robo reviewers are idiots who are just going to annoy us whatever the edit system looks like. Some people just want shiny badges whatever the cost and this change will not affect that. If anything, this change ensures a higher percentage of what they approve should have been approved anyway (since most trivial edits are good IME).
Finally..
I expect this post to attract down-votes. Hopefully some up-votes too. But it would be nice if the comments could articulate why something is a problem. Perhaps by pointing out some flaws in my reasoning above.