When deciding if a question should be reopened or closed you should be reading the question, seeing if the question merits closure, and if it doesn't, voting to reopen. Yes, looking at what was fixed in an edit, or what someone has said in a comment might help you figure this out more quickly but fundamentally such information is only there as a hint for you, not something you need to figure out the answer.
If a question is closed as unclear, and you think that it's clear and otherwise acceptable as it is, and doesn't need to be improved to merit being open, you should be voting to reopen, even if it wasn't edited. The same applies to every other close reason.
If other people disagree with you and the question ends up being closed again, then those people are of course free to cast such votes. If you feel that the question is acceptable, but that it could be improved even more such that it would be less likely to be closed in the future, consider editing the question yourself to help others see what you are seeing in the question. Keep in mind that it's also possible that others are seeing problems that you aren't seeing, or perhaps have a different standard of what they consider acceptable, and they are free to use their votes accordingly, just like you are with yours.
That's part of the design of the site; everyone casts their own votes based on their own views of a post, and at the end of the day the community's consensus wins out. (This applies for both up/down votes, as well as close/reopen votes.)