The problem is that the usage guidance around the "not an answer" flag is pants-on-head retarded.
What a reasonable person would do is look at a so-called "answer", see it's evidently not an answer to the question posed, and click the flag, at which point they're presented with this dialog:
And hey, guess what, there's a convenient option that says "not an answer" right there, and its flavour text says exactly what the problem is:
This was posted as an answer, but it does not attempt to answer the question. It should possibly be an edit, a comment, another question, or deleted altogether.
So a reasonable person will select that option, click the "flag answer" button, go on their merry way thinking they've done their good deed for the day... and a few hours later, get a notice that their flag has been declined.
That is not reasonable in any way shape or form. The user followed the instructions given to them by the system to curate content, and the system rejected them when they helped.
Forget about non-confrontational language and correct pronoun use - if anything on Stack Overflow contradicts the "be nice" ethos, it's this absolutely shameful situation of people trying to be helpful, and being told their help is not wanted.
The sad part is that, despite the recurring questions on this insanity on Meta, users - including many longstanding ones - just take it for granted that the system is broken and don't bother explaining that, instead focusing on telling incredulous users "this is insane, but you should just get used to it".
The meta questions generated by the Not An Answer flag are an X-Y problem if I've ever seen one. When are we going to focus on the X instead of the Y? When are we going to accept that being nice to users starts with making a logical system?