01:17
@Chipster Posts filled entirely with rude or abusive content (e.g., hate speech, threats to kill the moderators, etc.), and perhaps also posts that are absolutely unintelligible garbage (e.g., where it looks like a cat walked over the keyboard, questions filled with gibberish to get past a quality filter, etc.).
I emphasize "entirely filled with", because you shouldn't flag a post as "rude/abusive" just because it contains an expletive or two, as those can simply be edited out. Just like if it is mostly fine, but has some ranty paragraph about how much Microsoft sucks---just remove that paragraph with an edit. Don't use flags for problems that you can resolve yourself.
If you can't fix the problem by editing (i.e., if the post is just too far gone), then please flag.
A bit of background: when validated against a post, rude/abusive flags reduce the poster's reputation by 100 points, and also block their account from posting anything else for a certain period of time. I've talked about this on Meta before, but while i don't believe that flaggers should consider punishments in their decisions whether or not to flag a post, understanding the severity of the punishment associated with this flag may help you to understand the severity of the flag itself.
As with spam flags (but unlike all other types of flags), moderators can "dispute" a rude/abusive flag. This is a middle ground between "helpful" (which would apply the penalties) and "declined" (which would tell you that your flag was raised incorrectly). It's our way of saying that we don't want to apply the flag's penalty, so we're canceling the flag, but we understand why you raised the flag.
Many of us will dispute a rude/abusive flag on a post that clearly has rude or hateful content, but where we feel that the content can be merely edited out to salvage the post. But it's easier for us if the flagger just makes these edits in the first place.
I hope some of that helps, or even answers your question.
If you aren't sure when exactly a rude/abusive flag should be used, then perhaps consider yourself lucky. We do occasionally get posts that are shining example candidates for this flag, but they get removed pretty quickly. Which is the whole point of the flags.