There have been two questions on meta asked 5 hours apart, both about declined NAA flags on what most people would find blatant cases judging by comments and question votes ([first](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/388894/why-was-my-flag-on-a-seemingly-link-only-answer-declined-by-a-moderator), [second](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/388907/i-flagged-this-non-english-answer-as-naa-why-was-my-flag-declined)). I usually tell people not care about a few declined flags, but 1. both askers have 20k+ helpful flags on main, so presumably they have pretty good judgment on what the community and mods usually find not to be answers, 2. both flags were declined "to give the OP the opportunity to respond", or in a similar vein, according to the mod who declined them (thanks for the explanation!), and 3. it's not without recent precedent that moderators have [changed how they do their job](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/388097/when-are-comments-deleted-on-meta-stack-overflow) with somewhat problematic communication strategies. These all raise the obvious question: should the community change in how they raise NAA, VLQ and other flags, or is this just a statistical fluke?