I flagged this question as an exact duplicate of this question, which I believe is completely legitimate, as the text for the exact duplicate flag is:
This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question.
The asked question is the exact same problem as the earlier question. Even my answer on the duplicate question, which was slightly modified from the original question's answer, was marked as accepted, clearly showing that both questions are extremely similar.
Even this question on meta states that questions are closed as duplicates if it is found that "an earlier question to which nothing substantial is added by the new question."
Since I can't cast close votes, I flagged the question as a duplicate. Am I misunderstanding the duplicate question flag? Does it literally mean "exact, word-for-word, verbatim question as an earlier one"? I don't think that's the case, judging by the text for the exact duplicate flag, which makes me believe that my flag is legitimate and was improperly declined.
Finally, declining a flag that has a valid substance behind it is counterintuitive, as it discourages future flags, inherently begrudging somebody who is trying to help the site. Even if the person who reviewed my submission thought it was improperly flagged, a "disputed" resolution seems more appropriate then "declined", especially since "declined" states that there was "no evidence to support it", which is clearly not the case.