This continual fit-throwing about your having a question closed is getting pretty ridiculous.
Yes, I chose to largely ignore your first Meta question. Why? Three reasons:
I had already explained my rationale regarding the closure to the extent I felt it necessary to do so in comments underneath your question. There wasn't much more I thought I needed to say.
I especially felt like nothing more needed to be said because it was very obvious to me that you were not really interested in learning more about what I thought and why, but rather in disagreeing with it. I can't put it much more eloquently than BDL did, in a comment from your last question:
It doesn't seem that you are really seeking for input how to improve the question, but instead just try to argue why the five close voters are wrong. I already regret having tried to explain my reasons. It the same situation why a lot of people don't want to leave comments under the question anymore when downvoting or closevoting. – BDL
Finally, because I had already expressed my opinions and you had already expressed disagreement with them, I wanted to let other members of the community weigh in with their thoughts. That's the whole point of escalating an issue to Meta. You do this because you want the larger community's opinion, not because you want to have a conversation with the same people who voted to close your question.
And this really brings us to the larger point, and the direct answer to this question, namely how you are supposed to contact individual moderators: you aren't.
You simply aren't entitled to have a direct conversation with every individual who votes to close one of your questions. Perhaps it's reasonable to ask clarifying questions, or even ask them to reconsider, but that had already occurred in the comments on the question.
A significant reason that you aren't entitled to this is because of the acrimony that results, and these two Meta questions are excellent examples proving this is not merely a hypothetical concern.
There is a process surrounding closure on Stack Exchange sites, and with over 100k reputation, you surely already know what it is. If you don't, you can look at the help that's provided all over the place and figure it out, just like we expect others to do. Here is that process, in summary:
Community members evaluate your question and decide that it needs to be closed (for example, because it is off-topic). They cast votes to this end, and when a consensus is reached, the question is closed.
Now, you could sort of argue that, in this case, consensus was short-circuited because a moderator (me) cast a binding vote. Except I wasn't the only person who voted to close your question, so it's extremely disingenuous to act like I'm the only person with whom you had/have a bone to pick. I cast the fourth vote, so at best, my vote counted as two votes.
But even if my vote had counted as five votes, that wouldn't change how the process works.
If you disagree with your question having been closed, then you edit your question to explain very clearly why that closure is erroneous (in this case, why it is actually on-topic for Stack Overflow).
This edit then puts your question into the "reopen closed" queue, where other members of the community can evaluate your question and determine whether it should be re-opened.
This right here is why you don't need to contact individual users or moderators. You don't need them to get your question re-opened. Anyone can do that; you just need to find five people who agree with you, and you even get the chance to convince them by tweaking your question.
This whole "spoken in his capacity as a mod" issue has absolutely no relevance to anything. I spoke as a person, explaining to you why I felt that your question was off-topic. When I leave a comment explaining my rationale for closing a question, it does not create any kind of "official policy". It wouldn't even create an "official policy" if my opinion was posted in an answer on Meta. The official policies are in the Help Center, documented for everyone to see.
I'll note that your question has still not been re-opened by the community, even after two Meta posts about it serving to harass the users who closed it. The Meta effect is real, and it was not on your side here. That speaks volumes more than words from a moderator.
Acting as if I acted egregiously or irrationally is completely unfair. The sense of entitlement that you're showing is quite off-putting, and merely confirms that I was right to have ignored your first Meta question. There was no way it was going to lead to a constructive discussion.
For whatever it's worth, I was not the moderator who declined your flag on the first Meta question. That arguably would have been a conflict of interest…even though your flag was completely inappropriate by our standards for flags, which is the basis on which it was declined. The flag was as silly as the ones we get on main, where people ask for someone to answer their question. Flags are not to be used to beg for answers from moderators. We are exception-handlers and janitors, not question-answering agents. No exception occurred here: question-closing is a regular process.