Flagging is one of those activities that kinda grew up with the rest of Stack Overflow:
First there was just an "offensive" flag (later changed to "inappropriate", then back to "offensive" again). The number of pending offensive flags was visible to anyone with 2000 reputation, and triggered deletion at some (fairly high) threshold. It was more of a parallel voting system than anything like the flags we have today, though you may recognize some aspects of the current spam/abusive flag behavior.
Then there were three types of flags: spam and offensive as separate options, "Inform Moderator" as a new free-form catch-all. Now you could flag all sorts of things and get a moderator to look at them - or a 10k user.
Then there were comment flags. Apparently Jeff wasn't happy with some of us ruthlessly deleting all the comments on our posts...
Then there were many: a kinder, gentler moderator flag dialog launched with the goal of getting folks to flag a lot more stuff. This was successful - terribly, terribly successful.
...Then there were more. More close reasons, more flag reasons, changes to names and descriptions, review queues, hell-bans, soft-bans, warnings, an explosion of different "result statuses"... All added to try to balance the need for flagging with the weight it imposed on moderators and reviewers.
Have you kept up with all of this? Good for you! I'd guess most folks haven't though. And then there are folks who've never flagged before, and may never flag again: 60% of the folks who raised a flag for the first time in 2018 have still raised only one flag ever.
Let's face it: after ten years, a bunch of help-center articles and meta FAQs ain't gonna cut it; we gotta put more of this information in the UI itself. Hence the little blurb explaining what you're looking at, with links to more extensive information where possible.
Depending on the width of your screen, it takes up about as much space as one flag - maybe a little less, maybe a little more. If you have enough flags for this to matter, you're gonna be scrolling anyway. If you don't, then you stand to benefit from having the explanation.
I'd prefer to keep the experience as consistent as possible, but if you absolutely must be rid of it then a user script or style or any competent ad-blocker should rid you of it fairly easily.