Having had a quick look, I'd suggest that the problem here is a relative misunderstanding of the purpose of flagging vs. downvote or close voting.
The community members can:
- Downvote a poor question or answer.
- vote to close a question for being unclear, offtopic or otherwise a 'bad fit' for SO.
- Delete stuff that's junk.
See:
https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges
Since you only get those privileges at certain rep levels - flags exist in part to address this - and you'll see, for example, that you can 'flag' something as off topic, too broad, etc. That's basically pushing it into the 'close vote' queue.
But if you flag as VLQ, it goes into a different queue - one that's pruned a little more aggressively, and with a view to dealing with:
https://stackoverflow.com/help/privileges/flag-posts
"Very low quality (i.e. no amount of editing can salvage the post) (only posts scoring 0 or less)"
Likewise rude/abusive or spam posts need to be dealt with quickly. Otherwise 'normal' close reasons apply.
Note also - "Not an answer" - is for posts that don't even attempt to answer the question. Not for 'not very good answer' or 'wrong answer'. Those you downvote. (And if several people do, then they may well be deleted anyway).
The 'moderator attention' flag in particular is one that should be used sparingly, because there aren't many mods compared to the number of 'normal' users - so it's only really needed for scenarios where special circumstances apply or more severe action against specific users (rather than posts) is needed.
The rest, the community can - and should - take care of. That doesn't mean the things you identify are good per se, but most posts you can achieve a community consensus via upvotes and downvotes on the 'good' and 'bad' answers to a given question. Your flags should be reserved for the things where this doesn't apply.