First of all, thank you for taking the time to post this thorough report about possibly problematic moderator actions. 

I'd like to start by saying that I did not bring up Meta in the comments because I like Meta arguments for the sake of the arguments, but because I think it is the place that provides the best platform to scrutinize my actions. I will try to justify my decisions and how I arrived at the judgment leading up to them, but if it is established that I'm doing it wrong, I agree that it is important to bring this up early so I can adjust going forward.

Now on to the actual answer (this will repeat some arguments Bhargav Rao already raised in his answer):

> although of course I do expect some impressive Meta-fu to be demonstrated

The foundation of judging No An Answer flags is the canonical [When to flag an answer as “not an answer”?](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/265553/3002139), which states

> # What NOT To Flag
> 
> **Any post that attempts to answer the question—however badly—is still an answer**! 

This is there core guideline I think I am bound to follow – and rightfully so. As someone who had raised a five digit number of helpful flags before I was elected moderator, I feel like moderators actually applying the guidelines set by the community when handling flags is the opposite of them (now us) "not caring" or disrespecting the community moderators or the time they put in.

Having some sort of understanding of what flags to use for what between the elected moderators and the rest of the community helps the latter to efficiently and effectively moderate the site in my opinion.

Sadly, this is not the impression my actions left for you. I'm glad that we agree that no insults were intended from either side, but you ended feeling deeply insulted, and that's bad. Of course I do not at all want to alienate productive and helpful member of the site like you. Even doing this unintentionally is not acceptable; I will try to work on my communication. Let me assure you that I do value the time and effort you put into maintaining the site's quality standards.

This leads to my next point: you quoted my reply to the Moderator Election Q&A, in which I said:

> To be very clear, the first thing which I care about on the site, is quality.

This is a statement I firmly stand by; making a high quality, searchable Q/A repository for programming questions is the goal I subscribe to and for which I've put in the work and time I've spent on this site.

However, I do not think this contradicts my moderator actions in question. Me caring about quality of the site does not give me the mandate to just delete posts flagged as NAA just because they are bad answers, especially if we are telling reviewers not to do that with wording as strong as [A plea for sanity](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/287563/3002139).

---

Now moving on the actual posts in question. To recap the story of post No. 1:

You flagged it as NAA(and 3/4 reviewers agreed), downvoted and voted to delete. Then a moderator (not me) declined your NAA flag, ending the review. I can't talk for that mod, but I assume they judged the post to be an attempt to answer the question.

Then you flagged the post again, quoting the author to support your previous flag. However, [even the author saying a post is not an answer does not automatically mean the post is not an answer](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/q/346454/3002139). I tried to convey that point in my decline reason, and tried emphasizing it by removing the meta commentary to clarify the answer. As I admitted above, this evidently failed, and you felt insulted instead. Sorry for this.

I'm not quite sure what you mean with "I voted for deletion again" as you can only vote to delete a post once, but your ability to vote on the post as you see fit was not affected by any moderator action.

I did notice that [another answer](https://stackoverflow.com/a/51345591/3002139) mentions connectivity, and provides a short explanation. You can argue that the new answer is completely redundant, and I'm honestly not married to "let it stay" from that point of view. However, that was not the point raised in the flag I was reviewing, and as this was not a case of a question being drowned in identical answers (which do deserve a clean-up), I figured to leave it to the standard content ranking via votes. (I did not notice the deleted answer addressing connectivity, but I'm not sure that would have changed anything.)

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Regarding [the second post](https://stackoverflow.com/a/55746596/3002139): I hope we can agree that telling someone to accept an answer when there is not answer that can be accepted is not useful. That review comment should not have been posted because OP literally cannot follow its advice.

In this case, the original NAA-flags were handled by me. I again applied the guideline of not NAA-deleting attempts to answer, and thus declined the flags. Bhargav raises a good additional point noting that also creates invalid audits.

As posting your own answer is [the recommended course of action for questions answered only in the comments](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/a/251598/3002139), I figured the answer in itself needs no further treatment. The question is still off-topic, and I closed it as such.

Bhargav Rao later deleting the comments and editing the post was an independent decision he justifies in his own answer. Just for the record, I did reply to your comment on that question, too, but that might have been removed before it reached you.

I hope this explains the reasoning behind my actions sufficiently well. Please let me know if you still disagree.

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Last, to directly address your questions from the TL;DR:

>Is there any real concern on your table for not _alienating_ users who dutifully & consistently spend their valuable time in order to help keeping the place in order, which concern may be (just _may_ be) required to kick-in in situations like the _specific_ examples described above?

I was truly concerned right after I read your comment stating I made you feel like a "useless idiot". This is the very opposite of what I'm trying to achieve while moderating; making the site mostly useful, but hopefully also fun to use, for both new and especially also veteran users is a big priority for me.

Valuable users leaving needlessly over my actions is something I hope to avoid, and I hope the above explanation of my intentions and motivation helps getting the bad taste out of your mouth.

I guess the above paragraphs imply my answer to the other two questions you stated.