@Dharman It would be interesting to have a running demo of the mod tools that everyone can see, perhaps to give Meta readers and curators a better insight into how modding works. However, it might be hard to demonstrate the business value given the engineering effort involved.
@Dharman @halfer The default display has no context, other than other flags raised on the post/the post's comments. However, context is available by clicking to display the post either within the main flag list, or by opening the page in a separate tab. If the mod is going quickly through the list, then they don't look at context. My experience so far is that there's usually more than just the flagged comment(s) which should be handled.
So, yes, for some single comments, it's a very quick decision, but there's often something that lead up to such comments, which should also be handled, IMO/IM(limited)E.
@Makyen Thanks for the info. That sounds rather suboptimal, in that the comment could be presented to mods with the necessary context in the first instance. However, I guess this would be something for mods to raise on Meta for consideration, and if they have not done so thus far, maybe this means there is no pressing need to change the workflow.
@halfer The context is available, if the mod chooses to look at it (with a click, which could be easily automated with a userscript). If the only concern is the single comment, then the mod doesn't need more context. However, so far, I've usually found there's more to a situation than just a single flaggable comment.
mhm. I just saw a high reputation user rollbacked a suggested edit of mine fixing grammatical errors. That was my second edit on the site. Not good motivation for new contributors. Weird thing to do. Anyway; that was 3 years ago.
@Andreas In general I would rollback their rollback once, and if they do it again, flag for mod. Sometimes a comment helps too, to show that you have spotted it.
@Machavity that must make it hard work for some NLN flags where you need to know why the comment is NLN (usually based on corrections made to the post or prior comments being deleted)