TL;DR: abstract the action selection away from the user. Allow them to tell the system what's wrong and let the system decide what action to take.
Right now the process goes like this:
- Notice that something is wrong
- Try to remember, check the help section, guess, or infer from failure which action you're supposed to perform for this issue: vote to close, delete, flag, etc (or quit)
- Open a dialog for that action (if you can)
- Pick a reason why that action applies (if it's there... or go back to step 2, or quit)
- Submit
... which actually seems a little backwards. Step 2 seems like a huge liability. Why do we even need it? The user shouldn't have to choose which action to take. They should merely be reporting what's wrong so that the system can take the appropriate action on their behalf:
- Notice that something is wrong
- Open a "something's wrong" dialog
- Explain what's wrong (multiple checkboxes: it's a dupe, looks like an ad, etc)
- Submit, letting the system determine and take the appropriate action, e.g.: close, delete, flag, etc.
The idea is that the UI would offer no distinction between flag, close, or delete. Based on the problem described by the user, the system would route things appropriately. If the appropriate action would be to close, and the user can't yet vote to close, perhaps just thank them for their feedback and log the attempt anyway. Same thing if they're out of votes or flags or whatever. That logging could provide useful information for future discussions on rate limiting and feature metering.