Yesterday, I noticed an answer on a meta question:
"So what? <investment company> owns both of the companies. <link to a wiki page>"
That's a non-answer posted by a user that's known for less than constructive Meta activity. The answer was deleted by community members. At that time, it had a score of -20
.
Under that answer, there was a comment by a moderator:
"This is the root cause of the problem. Insightful. Shame people don't seem to realise this. Most activity is driven by greed, it takes a lot of effort to combat that, as it seems to be our species default setting."
Naturally, they're free to have that opinion, but I find it odd that a representative of the site / community would encourage non-answers like that. So much so, that I decided to (custom-) flag the comment:
In case you weren't aware: <username> is a known troll / conspiracy theorist that's usually unconstructive on Meta. I think it's a bad idea for a diamond to encourage him, especially on a non-answer. (2019-05-14 07:26:26Z)
Now, that flag was declined, and I'm curious why?
No comment has been added to the declination.
I understand that there isn't any "action" that could be taken from the comment / flag, but that wasn't the point of the flag. It was purely meant to raise awareness, possibly informing the moderator of something they didn't know yet.
- Shouldn't I have "voiced" my concerns in a private manner like that?
- If comment flags aren't the right way, how do I voice my concerns?
- Am I worrying too much, and does "declined" just mean they disagree with the comment flag?
Especially on a relatively low traffic site like Meta, I'd hoped to see some kind of explanation on a flag declination, even if it's a "Nah, that was fine."