Edit: I disagree that my question is a duplicate of this one; I am asking about the discrepancy between audits that require action and can be passed by flagging for NAA (or even VLQ) and "real" reviews of posts that have the same issues but where an NAA/VLQ flag would surely be declined. There a lot of them; I have passed most of the ones that I encountered but I'm not happy with the discrepancy since it keeps quality standards inconsistent. Hence my question.
I have recently started reviewing First Posts and Late Answers on Stack Overflow. In the process, one inevitably encounters many bad answers; I have been flagging these where I deemed appropriate. For guidance I used this excellent answer.
After having a number of NAA and one VLQ flag declined, I have started flagging with less zeal since apparently the standard for "answer" (as in not NAA) is pretty low. As a consequence of this, I have failed some audits, most recently this one, and am now review-banned, for the second time. Personally, I think we should hold answers to a high standard, so I don't think the post is a particularly valuable answer. But it seems to me, given the meta answer linked above and my recent declined flags, that it should not be flagged as NAA – so it should not have been an audit.
Now, having some bad audits seems inevitable, but this isn't the first one I have encountered where I actually would like to flag as NAA, but the rules tell me otherwise.
So I would like to ask: Can we handle NAA (and possibly VLQ, although maybe they're more clear-cut) more consistently, so that we can either flag with confidence, or have fewer questionable audits? I would prefer to uphold a higher standard for answers, but I'm not going to do that if my flags just keep getting declined (since that's a pretty clear indication that I'm doing it wrong).
Alternatively, if you think the way NAA flags are handled is fine, I would really appreciate some guidance (beyond the posts I have linked) as to when to flag as NAA. Because right now, I'm not sure how to proceed once I'm no longer review banned – I'd rather not get another ban, but flagging as NAA when I'm probably going to get declined is not great either, as it wastes the time of those handling the flags.