I recently had a few flags declined because the moderator thought that the entire question should've been closed and/or deleted. However, I can't vote to delete yet because I don't have enough reputation. Voting to close wouldn't completely solve the problem, either, because the answers were upvoted and it wouldn't Roomba.
What do they want us to do instead? If I flagged the whole thing for moderator intervention, wouldn't they just decline it on the grounds that it doesn't require moderator intervention?
This seems somewhat unreasonable to me. The fact that the entire question should've been deleted doesn't make it an answer, and it seems unreasonable to decline a perfectly correct flag. Also, this implies that whenever you flag an answer you also have to judge whether the question is close-worthy and/or delete-worthy; shouldn't those be separate decisions?
Edit: It seems like some of the discussion has focused on "maybe your NAA flag was incorrect." That may well be the case, but if that's the case, then shouldn't the moderator have declined it as "no evidence to support" rather than "I agree that it's NAA, but you still shouldn't have flagged it"?
Further edit: One particular case to focus on: the entire question is too broad, and all of the answers are link-only. The OP was not asking for off-site resources. In this case, my understanding is that I should vote to close the question and also flag the answers as NAA (which they are). Is this correct? How would a moderator handle those? Is it reasonable to decline the flag on the basis that you should just delete the entire question, even though the flags were technically correct?