To address your general question - if your edit was rejected and you disagree, there isn't much you can do. You can try to propose it again if you strongly believe you are correct and hope the reviewers get it right this time, but don't keep trying because you are going to just end up annoying reviewers as you'll likely have the same reviewer more than once and they might end up flagging for a moderator. Plus enough rejected edits in a short time frame might earn you a temporary edit ban.
The best course of action though is leaving a comment explaining the error and hope the author is still active and can make the change himself. You could also try to find someone in chat who is experienced in the technology that can make the edit for you.
For this specific edit though, the reviewers who rejected the edit failed at their tasks because the rejection was flat out wrong.
Unfortunately the "this edit deviates from the authors intent" is over used anytime a change in code or links or anything happens that the reviewer thinks is radically changing the post. This is a consequence of the fact that reviewers are not subject matter experts, so they may not know what is correct and what is incorrect for a specific technology or language.
What the reviewers should have done is check the old link. Had they done that, they would see the link points to a page that says:
Stop trying to make "lettable" happen.
:D
We're calling them "pipeable operators", because no one knows what the heck "lettable" means.
And the link is the link you were trying to point to. I don't know RxJS at all, but had I seen that, I would have approved the edit. And the reviewers should have done so too.