I recently saw an answer where the OP had edited it to be offensive, & I flagged it. The flag was declined as declined - Rolling back the edit was clearly the correct thing to do, not flag.
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I was going to ask why it was declined (the content was offensive, it should've merited the [offensive] flag), but then I came across Bill the Lizard's answer on Do moderators look at the revision history before declining a flag?, which states:
The problem is that you used an offensive flag because a user had the word "sh-t" in their code and forgot to remove it before posting. That flag carries a 100 reputation penalty, so it's quite a bit of overkill for this offense. Better to just edit out the curse word, and save the offensive flags for posts that need to be nuked from orbit immediately.
It was a similar situation here, but the user purposely edited their question to add the offensive content. I see why the [offensive] flag was invalid as it could've (and was) edited out by another user.
However, that does lead to the question: doesn't this mean that every [offensive] flag is invalid? This is because every post can be edited to remove the offensive content (the exception being locked posts, of which it is not possible to flag these posts).
I'm slightly confused; what content actually merits the use of the [offensive] flag?
I did bring up the topic on one of the chat rooms (I tried to find the messages, but I'm unable to find them- will update this if I manage to find them) and one user said something along the lines of:
I'd only flag as [offensive] if the user does it again.
Is this (repeat posts/edits/whatever with offensive language) use case what the "offensive" flag is for?
Please could this be clarified?