Been reading a suggested wording change to the "not an answer" flag and related meta discussions (there are a lot).
It's obvious that there are two camps on this issue, each with a lot of voices. One says:
"Not an answer" means something that is not an answer to any question. Doesn't matter what the question was. Mod should (probably) be able to accept/decline the flag without seeing the question.
The other says:
We should be able to flag answers that clearly don't answer the actual question. They don't belong here, and very often the downvoting system doesn't clear them out in a timely manner, or at all.
And every time the issue comes up (usually "why was my flag declined?" meta questions), there's a lot of debate, usually with experienced mods arguing the former (on the basis that it is actually the intent of the flag, along with the fact that they shouldn't have to make a judgement call based on technical knowledge), and lots of other people arguing the other point, with people on both sides seeming to ignore that they're both useful points of view.
To me, this smacks of a dysfunctional debate.
- "The water tastes bad."
- "Then stop drinking out of the toilet."
- "But I'm really thirsty and I should be able to drink."
- "Yes, but it's a toilet."...
Maybe the solution is to install a drinking fountain?
Ok, I was never great at analogies, but should we have two different flags?
- not any kind of answer to anything, clearly should be deleted (mods should be able to clear this out with a 5-second glance)
- not an answer to this question (might need a bit more thought to review)