This appears to refer to suggested edit reviews. I don't believe people doing reviews without technical expertise is much of a problem, for the following reasons:
Stack Overflow is not Wikipedia. A post should not be edited to radically change the technical content (with a few exceptions listed further below).
If a question is missing a lot of important details, then it should obviously be edited by the OP. There is no way anyone but the OP can fix it. Close vote such questions as off topic -> lack details to reproduce. In case the OP left a lot of code in comments, then it is fine to edit the question and include this, though make a comment to the edit reviewers "pasted from comments by OP" or similar.
If an answer is missing a lot of important details or is simply incorrect, it is not a good answer. It should not be "fixed", it should possibly be down-voted with a comment explaining why it is not a good answer. Then the radical changes needed to correctly answer the question should be posted as a new, separate answer.
The only time an answer should be edited to change the technical content is either when the OP of the answer made some simple mistakes that can be fixed without changing their intent or drastically change the answer. Typos, simple syntax errors, formatting etc.
Note that minor syntax errors should never get fixed in a question, as they may be the actual cause of the problem described!
Given the above, suggested edit reviews therefore rarely require domain knowledge. Most such edits are actually invalid and should be rejected. Apart from the following exceptions:
- Minor technical edits to an answer as described above.
- Edits that change tags of the question. This often requires review by a domain expert.
- The post is a community wiki.
- The post is a tag wiki.
I suppose tag wiki edit reviews by people without technical expertise might be a valid concern. But most often such reviews is only about ensuring that the text isn't some copy-pasta from wikipedia or other sources.
A much greater concern is the "robo-reviews", which is a persistent problem on the site, and has been discussed on plenty of other meta threads.
If you don't have domain knowledge of the subject you shouldn't be reviewing something that requires said knowledge.
But that's just it; suggested edits were specifically set up to not require domain knowledge to evaluate.