Flags are only a misuse if not raised in good faith, or if you've been asked to stop raising a particular flag due to a particular set of circumstances. A common example (loosely taken from someone I had to contact privately about their flags)
"I don't like this question" doesn't always mean it's very low quality and a candidate for immediate deletion.
People flag all kinds of stuff as 'spam' that isn't remotely close to unwelcome / unsolicited ads or link planting. However, those flags are in good faith - folks honestly felt as if they were reporting something that wasn't right to someone in authority, they just selected the completely wrong reason when doing so.
Moderators can and will decline your flag if they feel that it's (1) without merit or supporting evidence or (2) not something you should be flagging. A very common flag to decline is someone reporting a wrong answer - that happens a lot. But we have to look at the intent of the users raising the flag - most of them just want to help in some small way, and we're lucky to have them.
With language, there's a subtle difference between:
- This is likely to offend someone, probably
and
- This actually offended me, I'm less happy than I was a moment ago after reading it, and this page of the site now embarrasses me
Try to stick to the second, unless it's a very cut and dry case, at which time the first point becomes more of when it will offend someone, not if.
Part of the reason why Stack Overflow is kept so clean is people keeping an eye out and raising flags, and we've reiterated many times that users should flag something that they really believe to be a problem.
It's only a problem when you create unnecessary work for volunteers, so just watch the results of your flags and see what the mods have to say. If a few get declined, think twice about how you're using that particular flag.
When it comes to flagging, how mods generally respond, how one should interpret their feedback - folks always want some black and white guidelines to follow - we're programmers, we like stuff like that. There are just too many human decisions at play here to provide that, and I haven't touched on mistakes that said humans tend to make.
Do what seems right and pay attention to the results, that's all we ask. :) Oh, yeah - remember, mods are there to do what the community can't. It's nice to ask yourself "Can I fix this?" before raising a flag for them to do it.