I can't speak for the mod who declined it, but I would not have declined your flag, or if I did, I would have deleted the post after declining.
That being said, what you flagged is clearly not an answer; it's just a link. This was something so obvious that you could have flagged it as Not An Answer and have it handled by normal users in the Low Quality Answers review, so a moderator may have declined it as not being something that required their attention. It's not a huge issue since moderators delete a lot of NAA flags anyway, and they do it quicker than the review, but it's something to keep in mind in the future.
The boilerplate decline "Using standard flags helps us prioritize problems and resolve them faster. Please familiarize yourself with the list of standard flags: see What is Flagging?" is generally used when users tell us about some problem that is usually handled by community, not moderators. An example is users flagging to get the question closed. It's because users who do not have privilege to vote to close, get the option to flag a question for closure. The flag will then push the question into the review queue instead of sending it to moderators. This decline reason is rarely used for anything else.