To add to Shog9's answer, and provide context: you and another user provided answers to a question. You stated in the comments on their answer that their answer was wrong and wouldn't compile. They responded and said that it did compile, and that you were testing it incorrectly. They also stated that your answer was incorrect, and provided reasons for why that was (this comment was voted up by someone else).
After this, you flagged their answer as "not an answer" and had that flag disputed in review (it most likely would have been declined if seen by a moderator). You suggested two edits to the post, which were accepted. You then flagged it with the following custom flag:
The OP was posting 30 days ago with an invalid code response that does not work as advertised on any basic ide or compiler and should be deleted.
which was declined. You then re-flagged it with:
This answer was posted months ago and I have tried to get the original poster in comments to repair it because it does not produce correct output. I have also edited it several times but it still does not display what it says: to convert case of strings.
and had that declined again with the above. An additional suggested edit that rewrote the answer was also declined in review.
In this case we have two people who are arguing that the other is wrong. Who do we trust? Do we just take your word for it and remove the answer that competes with you? What if they made the same claims and asked for your answer to be deleted? They did say you were wrong, after all.
This is why moderators almost always decline flags that ask us to delete incorrect answers or comments. You really don't want a small group of people going around and removing answers that they think are wrong. It's also nearly impossible for every technology on this site to be represented among the pool of moderators. Stack Overflow is simply too broad.
The whole point of this site is that the community decides what is and is not correct via voting. Using moderators to delete incorrect answers short-circuits that and reduces trust in the system. If you see something that is wrong, vote it down, point out what is wrong with it, and / or provide your own answer that you believe to be correct. If you've made a strong enough argument, let the community decide who is and isn't correct via votes. Yes, there are occasional failures of this system, but overall it works well.