A confession: somehow, after years on Stack Exchange, I'm still nowhere near understanding Very Low Quality flags, and they don't seem to be documented properly anywhere that I can find.
When I flag a post as VLQ, what happens? Does it go to the VLQ queue, or to a moderator queue that I can't see, or to both, or sometimes to one and sometimes to the other? What determines this? Does it depend upon my rep?
Very Low Quality flags push the post into the Low Quality Posts queue (which requires 2k) after being active for 15 minutes. They are generally auto-dismissed by community actions.
But George Stocker says:
By flagging something as very low quality, you're asking for a straight pass to moderator deletion.
How can these two statements be simultaneously true?
And meanwhile... is the "Low Quality" in the name of "Low Quality Posts" review queue intended to have the same meaning as the "Very Low Quality" in the name of the "Very Low Quality" flag? Moderators seem to push the idea that we need to be ultra-conservative in our VLQ-flagging because moderators shouldn't be routinely making deletion decisions that depend upon debatable judgements of post quality, and those decisions should instead be made by the community. (At least, I think that's the rationale; George's answer from an hour ago is just one example of many.) But:
Aren't VLQ flags and the corresponding LQP queue precisely the way that the community makes those decisions? As far as I can tell, VLQ flags, the LQP queue, and delete votes are pretty much analogous to close flags, the close vote queue, and close votes... except that for some arbitrary reason I don't know, in some circumstances that I don't know, a moderator gets involved in the process. Why? It would be obviously unhelpful if the majority of the site's close flags ended up in front of diamond moderators, so why do we have that system for VLQ votes? How are users with deletion privileges supposed to reach the number of delete votes required to nuke a post without bothering the mods if the tools they have to bring deletion-worthy posts to each others' attention bother the mods as a side effect?
VLQ flags aren't presented in the privileges section or Jeff Atwood's post about VLQ flags that's linked to from the privileges section or the text of the flagging dialog itself as involving diamond moderators in any way whatsoever. As far as I can tell there no way at all for a non-Meta-reading user to ever discover that diamond mods have any part to play in their handling. Surely we can communicate about this better, by which I mean at all? The current system we have is that the site seemingly tells users "hey, here's a nifty tool you can use to clean up garbage content without bothering the moderators", and then those users get their flags declined with what seem to be meaningless generic decline reasons and the mods are routinely posting on Meta complaining about VLQ flags that 99% of VLQ flaggers probably never wanted mods involved with in the first place. Wouldn't this be solved, or at least heavily mitigated, by telling ordinary, non-Meta-visiting users how VLQ flags work?
Given that we're supposed to be super-cautious about raising VLQ flags on only the most extreme garbage, does it follow that we should use the same standard when reviewing posts in the LQP queue? Should we be choosing "Looks OK" for pretty much everything? If not, shouldn't there be two different levels of VLQ flag, or shouldn't we be removing mods from this process entirely? It seems obviously perverse to have a system in which I can flag something as VLQ, and then, based upon undocumented factors out of my control, it will get handled by one of two completely separate groups with completely different standards; why not let me choose?
What the heck is even garbagey enough to justify a VLQ flag, anyway, while simultaneously not counting as either Spam or NAA? I gave up on VLQ flagging early in my time on Stack Overflow because my VLQ flags were all (and I think I literally mean "all") just getting declined without explanation. While mods are heavy on emphasising just how very very garbagey a post must be to merit a VLQ flag (yet again, George's post is a good example), I've never seen anyone exhibit a single example of a post that merited a VLQ flag that wouldn't've merited an NAA or Spam flag. An example or two would help me, and perhaps others, finally understand what this feature is for.
I apologise for the breadth of this question; I'd've liked to ask a narrowly scoped question about only the details that I don't understand, but honestly, there's almost nothing about VLQ flags that I do understand, and I don't think that's my fault given that not even the basic mechanics of what they do are documented.