The flag decline message is pretty clear about why your flag was declined, and why it's important to use standard flags:
Using standard flags helps us prioritize problems and
resolve them faster. Please familiarize yourself with the list of
standard flags: see What is Flagging?
The explanation is literally right there in the first sentence. I'm not sure if you just skipped over that, or you simply found it unconvincing. In case it's the latter, perhaps it would help if I pointed out that, this month alone, moderators have handled over 60,000 flags—and there's nothing unusual about this month.
Raising custom flags in cases where standard flags would do just doesn't scale. We can't sort custom flags, which not only means we can't prioritize them, but it also means that handling them takes longer. You should only raise custom flags when one of the standard flags doesn't do, or when you need to provide additional context.
Furthermore, moderators are not your personal question-closing valets. The job of a moderator is that of an exception-handler. We step in when the community is unable to handle a situation on their own. That means we spend a lot of time investigating vote fraud, abusive behavior, consistently low-quality contributions over time, plagiarism, etc. We often close questions as part of carrying out these duties, but closing questions is not our primary job.
The community can, does, and should close questions on their own, without moderator intervention. Anyone with 3k+ reputation can cast votes to close questions, and anyone with 15+ reputation can flag posts as in need of closure. If a question needs to be closed, then you should flag it as being in need of closure, not flag it for moderator attention. The difference is, closure flags put the question into a different review queue that is monitored by all members of the community who are eligible to cast close votes, not just by moderators.
So, in addition to the reasons stated in the flag decline message, your flag was also declined because "this question needs to be closed" is not a valid reason to flag for moderator attention. It's a valid reason to flag for closure.
Beyond all of that, you say in a comment:
none of the flag for closure options gave me the proper reason why I think it should be flagged
If that's really true, then that means you shouldn't have flagged it. I decline a lot of "This is a homework question" flags for this same reason—who cares? If you can't find any of the close reasons that fit, then the odds are almost overwhelmingly that the question should not be closed.
Moderators don't have different close reasons available to us; we have to pick from the same buffet of choices that regular users have. So, if none of those fit, we can't close the question, either. And we shouldn't.
In this case, though, the question did need to be closed, and one of the standard reasons clearly fit: too broad. That's why I closed it as such. You claim that:
The question was immediately put on hold (as it should) which confirms that I was right to flag it.
but that is not the case. My closure of the question was almost entirely unrelated to your flag. They coincided only in the sense that your flag was what brought the question to my attention. My processing of your flag was entirely independent of my handling of the question.
You could have flagged it as:
bippity boppity boo
and I still would have done the same thing: declined the flag, and closed the question. Even if a post is misflagged, I still handle the post as it should be handled. And I decline the erroneous flags in hopes of educating the person who raised the flag that they are doing it wrong.
You also surmised that:
Thus, the moderator's only reason for declining my flag was because I didn't use one of the standard flags and choose to specify my own.
Yes, that is pretty accurate. Raising a flag for the wrong reason is sufficient grounds on which to decline that flag.
If a certain moderator is bothered by flags that specify a custom reason, then they should simply skip them and leave them for others who can handle it better.
There is no one else who was going to "handle it better". The flag decline message you got about using standard flags is one of the canned decline reasons that moderators have to choose from. The odds are greater than 99% that any moderator would have declined your flag for the exact same reason.
It's ironic that many people make this exact same argument with respect to closing questions: "if you are bothered by it, then you should simply skip/ignore it and leave it for others who can answer it". That's not how things are done on Stack Overflow.
Additionally, I would like to propose that all previously declined flags about a certain post/comment be automatically changed to helpful should the post/comment that they've flagged get through a subsequent flag by another user. This will help fix a user's declined flag score when their flag gets declined due to moderator error.
There was absolutely no moderator error here, and what you're proposing makes absolutely no sense. If you raise a flag for the wrong reason, then that flag should be declined. Nothing else that happens on that post should affect the disposition of your flag. Like I said earlier, if you had flagged the post as "bippity boppity boo", and then I later find out that the question was posted by a sockpuppet account, that would not be grounds for marking your flag as helpful. Flags are evaluated on their own, individual merit.
Speaking of the individual merit of your flag, you fundamentally misidentified the problem with the question. What your flag said was:
No research was done and the question is unlikely to help anyone in the future.
That is a great reason to downvote a question. The tooltip on the downvote arrow says pretty much exactly this: "This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful". That is, however, not a reason to close a question.
As stated earlier, there was a reason to close the question, but your flag did nothing to help me find or identify it. Your flag was just noise that got in the way. As such, it was declined.
Cast Close And Reopen Votes
yet, so flagging was the best I can do.Flag Posts
privilege page stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/flag-posts then I would have known it.