As the moderator who sent the message, I will try to answer your questions and clarify my request. Everyone who is not OP, please note: the quotation in the question is not my entire message to OP. The full message was significantly longer and attempted to make most of the points that follow.
TL;DR The problem is that you are both seeking out posts, sometimes very old ones, to edit and only making very trivial edits. This bumps old posts to the home page for no real reason, which disadvantages (1) new questions, (2) new answers, and (3) more significant edits.
Minor edits, particularly on brand-new posts, are often fine. It's only a problem when you are (1) looking for these kinds of things to edit, (2) only making those minor edits, and (3) failing to edit other problems with a post.
Background
In a nutshell:
Your editing activity drew a flag from another user.
It was a custom flag.
Custom flags take roughly 10x more time than standard flags because they almost always require much more investigation. This means we do investigate, but we have to limit the investigation somehow. You have done well over 1,100 edits, so I'm not going to look at all of those. I'm going to pick a sample of recent edits and see if it looks like a problem.
I investigated and found that you had, in fact, made lots of recent, trivial edits. For example, in this one you missed a typo and some awkward grammar. This one had lots of issues, like incorrect formatting, an inline URL that should probably be linked text, some awkward sentences, and an unnecessary "EDIT:." But the only change you made was to remove
I hope that helps!
Mark
Some of these edits were on very old posts, often very low-scoring old posts, which made it look like you were looking for things to edit based on certain phrases, not just stumbling across some posts that needed editing. And some of your edits were arguably inappropriate, anyway, because they changed the meaning of the post, like this one.
Again, I didn't check all of your edits. I looked at the last dozen or so at the time.
I agreed with the flagger that something was amiss, so I needed to do something about it.
A mod message is the easiest, fastest, clearest means at my disposal in that scenario to contact you directly and let you know that something is going wrong.
Your questions
(1) So, this is discouraged, but it is not a punishable violation?
Yes, it's discouraged. Generally, it's not going to lead to a suspension or anything more severe.
I say "generally" because there are always exceptions. The first Meta discussion you linked to above, for example, shows an extreme abuse of the editing system. If that kind of thing continues after a moderator has stepped in, yes, it could theoretically result in a suspension. Similarly, if you were to set up a bot to abuse the API and make these edits by the hundreds or thousands, you can expect to hear from one of us, and we will almost certainly issue a suspension just to stop the behavior until we can talk to you.
(2) Why is it discouraged if the majority of people seem(ed) to like it?
To be clear, it's not that people "liked" your edits; they approved them, which is different. Some reviewers don't do a great job and will approve literally anything they see (see robo-reviewing). As SO legend and former moderator Bill the Lizard explained in the second Meta discussion you mentioned,
A simple "thanks in advance" does not get in the way of the rest of the question when it's all the way at the end of a post (unlike salutations at the beginning), so I don't think it's worth suggesting an edit only to remove a "thanks."
I could understand if people removed "thanks in advance" once in a while when they happened upon it while answering questions, but to search for the phrase and remove it in bulk seems a bit excessive. That's wasting the time of suggested edit reviewers.
Lots of bad edits get through the review process. That indicates a problem with the review process, not that the edits are necessarily okay.
You wrote,
In my opinion even removing "thanks" or something makes a post more useful. It is shorter and I bet a lot of people find it more pleasing and professional. Because this is what SO is for me: A professional community of programmers.
Sure, but not if you are bumping lots of old posts to the home page for trivial reasons. The marginal value of removing the word "thanks" is very low.
(3) Additionally, the OP learns from this mistake and may not do it in the future. What do you think?
Okay, but that doesn't mean you should do trivial edits. Remove the excess verbiage and fix all other issues with the post.
(4) Consider the post is perfect except for a "thanks" at the end. Am I doing wrong then removing it?
Yes, if (1) there are other issues that you didn't fix or (2) you are going looking for posts to edit in this way. There's no need to dredge up old posts only to remove the word "thanks," especially if there's more that should be addressed. See the quote from Bill the Lizard above.
(5) If the bumping up of the post is a major problem. Shouldn't we change when a post is bumped up or incorparate a 'major edit' switch? This way the post is only bumped if the switch was activated.
This would be a disaster, as several other folks have pointed out. It would lead to lots more spam, defacement, and other issues. If we leave the switch up to the editor, it will be abused. If we try to automate it, it will create a tremendous amount of work for the developers and very likely break a lot of posts unintentionally. The better policy is the one we have: encourage substantive editing, so that every edit is one that merits bumping the post back to the home page.
In short, please just go easy on the edit system. If a post is worth editing, it's worth editing in full, not just to remove a relatively harmless "thanks" or "hope that helps." The occasional edit like that is harmless, but doing lots of them is a cause for concern.