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TigerhawkT3
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I was offended by a comment directed at me today (no link, as it has already been deleted), so I flagged it as rude/offensive. It was declined.

Does that declination mean "I, the mod or high-rep user reviewing this flag, was not personally offended" - i.e., is the rude/offensive flag intended to denote content that would offend anyone who sees it, not just the person it was directed at? In situations where the remark in question was only offensive to the individual at whom it was directed, is it better to raise a custom flag explaining that someone has taken offense at the posted content?

TL;DR: Does "offensive" mean "this offended someone"?

To explain the situation further, a new user asked a very basic question that could've been answered in a few seconds by Googling their question's title. A high-rep user with a gold badge in that tag stopped by and, instead of taking the few seconds to close as a duplicate, answered the question. I asked him why he didn't just close it, and his response wasn't "heh heh, sometimes I just can't resist" or "I was just bored, I guess" or "sure, I'll close this one now." He started by going through my profile, looking for answers to questions that were eventually closed as duplicates. He then presented these answers as evidence that I occasionally answer questions that eventually get closed as duplicates, extrapolating this into "and therefore you have no right to even suggest that someone else ever VTC as duplicate instead of answering."

I told him that I had tried to find good duplicates for those but was unsuccessful (or sometimes a question doesn't seem common so I don't think to search for duplicates), so I answered them. I mean, I could've answered the question we were on (it was really, really basic - even the asker could've answered it if they'd had the patience for 5-10 seconds of research) but I VTC as duplicate instead, so I thought it was apparent that I try my best to VTC as duplicate instead of answering. I also said that my failures don't mean that failure is okay.

Then he dismissed me and said he had more important things to do with his time.

Am I really so wrong to be offended about this? Was I being just as not-offensive as this high-rep user wasn't not being? If you asked a high-rep user to moderate the site a bit more carefully and they responded by telling you that A) you have no right to talk about that and B) they have more important things to do than talk to you, would you really not be offended?

I was offended by a comment directed at me today (no link, as it has already been deleted), so I flagged it as rude/offensive. It was declined.

Does that declination mean "I, the mod or high-rep user reviewing this flag, was not personally offended" - i.e., is the rude/offensive flag intended to denote content that would offend anyone who sees it, not just the person it was directed at? In situations where the remark in question was only offensive to the individual at whom it was directed, is it better to raise a custom flag explaining that someone has taken offense at the posted content?

TL;DR: Does "offensive" mean "this offended someone"?

I was offended by a comment directed at me today (no link, as it has already been deleted), so I flagged it as rude/offensive. It was declined.

Does that declination mean "I, the mod or high-rep user reviewing this flag, was not personally offended" - i.e., is the rude/offensive flag intended to denote content that would offend anyone who sees it, not just the person it was directed at? In situations where the remark in question was only offensive to the individual at whom it was directed, is it better to raise a custom flag explaining that someone has taken offense at the posted content?

TL;DR: Does "offensive" mean "this offended someone"?

To explain the situation further, a new user asked a very basic question that could've been answered in a few seconds by Googling their question's title. A high-rep user with a gold badge in that tag stopped by and, instead of taking the few seconds to close as a duplicate, answered the question. I asked him why he didn't just close it, and his response wasn't "heh heh, sometimes I just can't resist" or "I was just bored, I guess" or "sure, I'll close this one now." He started by going through my profile, looking for answers to questions that were eventually closed as duplicates. He then presented these answers as evidence that I occasionally answer questions that eventually get closed as duplicates, extrapolating this into "and therefore you have no right to even suggest that someone else ever VTC as duplicate instead of answering."

I told him that I had tried to find good duplicates for those but was unsuccessful (or sometimes a question doesn't seem common so I don't think to search for duplicates), so I answered them. I mean, I could've answered the question we were on (it was really, really basic - even the asker could've answered it if they'd had the patience for 5-10 seconds of research) but I VTC as duplicate instead, so I thought it was apparent that I try my best to VTC as duplicate instead of answering. I also said that my failures don't mean that failure is okay.

Then he dismissed me and said he had more important things to do with his time.

Am I really so wrong to be offended about this? Was I being just as not-offensive as this high-rep user wasn't not being? If you asked a high-rep user to moderate the site a bit more carefully and they responded by telling you that A) you have no right to talk about that and B) they have more important things to do than talk to you, would you really not be offended?

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TigerhawkT3
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What makes something offensive?

I was offended by a comment directed at me today (no link, as it has already been deleted), so I flagged it as rude/offensive. It was declined.

Does that declination mean "I, the mod or high-rep user reviewing this flag, was not personally offended" - i.e., is the rude/offensive flag intended to denote content that would offend anyone who sees it, not just the person it was directed at? In situations where the remark in question was only offensive to the individual at whom it was directed, is it better to raise a custom flag explaining that someone has taken offense at the posted content?

TL;DR: Does "offensive" mean "this offended someone"?