In another question I hypothesized that one reason a few sentences written by a moderator seemed unclear may have been ESL (English as a Second Language) issues -- that is if a hypothetically ESL moderator had a clear idea, and in transcribing it to English, unknowingly produced text less clear than that initial clear idea. Whether or not my hypothesis was true in that particular instance, (it may of course have been this reader's fuzzy comprehension at work), it's certainly possible that ESL moderators make the occasional flub, and probably happens all the time with any broadly international user-base.
Soon another user regarded my ESL hypothesis as a personal insult to that moderator, (or perhaps some broader slur against all ESL moderators). Perhaps not coincidentally, multiple down-votes occurred.
So far as I've seen, SE users (considered separately from moderators) generally do not regard ESL corrections or queries as insults (see note below). ESL being difficult, users seem to both expect, and are not offended by, difficulties.
Are ESL moderators regarded as much that more immune to such difficulties than ESL users, and if so, why?
Note: one possible reason users might seem to be less prone to suppose an insult, is if the moderators already do a good job at removing any such inter-user postings, so that users never see ESL-phobia as a general fault.
Observations based on comments and voting patterns... The idea of being incorrectly presumed an ESL speaker seems to trigger SOM readers. Then follow galloping inferences of ill intent, then righteous censure of same.