TL DR:
A rude/abusive, not an answer or low quality flag are all suitable for this type of post. A custom mod flag is only suitable if the post has been on the site for some time, i.e. the automatic deletion provided by the other flags hasn't worked.
Disclaimer: I didn't handle the flag, so I can't answer for the mod who did.
###What happened
What happened
The not an answer flags were marked helpful, the rude/abusive flags were declined. The account was then destroyed.
Reason
This user was created to post spam or nonsense and has no other positive participation
this is a canned reason
###Abusive of the site
Abusive of the site
Posts like that are abusive of the site and it's recommended to flag as rude/abusive. They're time wasters and often the pattern that trolls use on the site. There is the caveat that sometimes people will test the waters (literally at times), but it's a fine line to know which is which. I wouldn't penalise the flagger for flagging a nonsense post as rude/abusive, I'd dispute the flag if there was ambivalence. For example, if the user has also posted useful content.
The not an answer or very low quality flags also suit this type of post. The post would most likely be deleted before a custom mod flag would be handled, so it's probably of no practical use to raise a custom flag. The mod will still have to go to the post even if it's been deleted by standard user flags, so it's a waste of time, unless the post has been sitting there for some time.
When handling posts like that, I check the user's activity for other posts. If there's no sensible posts and the account has been opened recently (often they will be opened minutes before posting) the account will be destroyed. If it's an older account I usually check to see if there's been any suspicious activity, re login before destroying, as people's accounts can sometimes be hacked.
After discussion with another mod, I've cleared the flags and re-deleted it as rude/abusive. This has now marked the rude/abusive flags as disputed, rather than declined.
There's some controversy over the intent of the linked Meta posts. I've included some of Shog's answer here:
Abusive means what it says. Don't overthink this.
Look... The problem folks have with these is that they see the pile of nonsense and try to extract meaning from it. "Surely if I can determine what the author's intent was," you might imagine them saying to themselves, "...I can then pick the exact right type of flag."
This is an utter waste of time. There is no meaning to the post! It's VLQ, it's abuse, it's Not An Answer, heck it might even be a spammer, testing the waters... There's no metric you can apply that'll narrow that down, because there is no meaningful content to apply metrics to.
So pick the flag that speaks to you. I'm partial to "rude or abusive", because enough of them immediately delete and lock the post, which is handy in those rare scenarios where someone's flooding the site with a lot of these... But VLQ or NAA work just as well in the vast majority of cases. The important thing to remember here is that when the post clearly means nothing, you shouldn't be wasting too much thought trying to decipher it; flag it and move on with your life.
Please note "I'm partial to "rude or abusive"", but Shog also states that any flag would work as well.