~2 the edit is going to be rejected for going against author intent, however, the discussion in comments suggests that the edit is correct and simply transfers a valuable comment into a highly upvoted answer. But I am not an SME and cannot really assess the correctness
@RyanM neither am I, I'll try to make a shout-out
btw, what have we decided on suggested edit redactions? Today, I received additional guidance in response to a helpful flag to make the edit on the post. Unfortunately, the post had a pending edit on it that did exactly that, and I stumbled upon another one a bit later. I am fluctuating between "approve and edit" and "reject and edit". It does not make sense to me to punish editor for good intentions, however, approval is more visible, whereas rejection has less visibility.
@OlegValteriswithUkraine damn it! used "u" again :( redactions
^ I have to explain that one - that's not a self-report :) It's about a rejection for "conflicts with author's intent", most likely meant because the edit introduces "she/he" instead of "he". Nowhere in the rest of the edit it conflicts with author's intent either.
@RyanM oh, I already decided against it :) I examined it further, and it seems like SE provides enough safeguards for normal users (f.e., they disable the submit button) in this case for this to not be a problem