Why was your flag rejected rather than accepted? Because both would have been equally right; it was a toss-up, not worth much reflection or hand-wringing.
I say, address the root cause instead:
Crap questions attract crap answers like turds attract flies.
When I review, I often find myself hesitating; this answer is so bad, does it really qualify as an answer? Then I look at the question and go, ah, that's what's going on. Then I vote to obliterate the entire Q&A in one fell swoop instead.
You can debate endlessly — with others on meta, or on your own when about to cast a flag — whether a terrible post is on one or the other side of the fuzzy scatological smear that separates barely-arguably-answers from not-quite-arguably-answers. Witness the comments to this meta Q&A. Is such debate useful? Not particularly.
Instead, next time you face a similar situation, flag the question. It's a clear-cut case, it will get acted upon, and it will be useful.