Anyways.
Another way of putting a curiosity behind the OP is to ask when skepticism has reached its limit. Skepticism means being skeptical -- period. Just like rationalism means espousing reason or holding reason as the standard for determining truth, so skepticism is a method for determining how go about getting truth -- by doubting stuff until there's a good enough reason to believe it.
But the moment we say, "doubt everything until there's a good enough reason," we have by definition included the very thing that commands us to doubt -- skepticism itself. But the moment we doubt skepticism, skepticism negates itself, given that doubting the command to doubt means no doubting at all.
You can take this as a specific critique of skepticism, or more interestingly as a critique of systems in general -- they negate themselves when they are honest and include themselves in their own crosshairs. But what's the next step if skepticism (as an example system) can't validate itself? If we can't unveil skepticism as a preferred method by being skeptical, then this means that skepticism is "given" by some other means. By what authority is skepticism given?
Either the authority of someone else, just because (appeal to authority, fallacy), by some type of practical or pure reasoning (yet to be revealed), or by an appeal to axioms or intuition -- skepticism because it just feels right, man.
A way out of this has been to appeal to a category error, which I understand as saying you can't apply skepticism to itself. But if it's a category error to say you can't attempt to validate skepticism according to its own criteria, then this means that skepticism is by definition "given" by some other means. See above.
So now you're like, "okay, Received, just because you're skeptical doesn't mean that you have to be skeptical of everything." But here's the ultimate question: where do we draw the line between what should be given our skepticism and what shouldn't?
The whole thing seems like a methodological excuse for "I don't like this." When I experience something that's against my taste or I'm repulsed by ideologically, then it's all about skepticism! Almost. As a general approach, I think skepticism makes a lot of sense. Skepticism means taking our time with a conclusion out of caution that it could be wrong if we accepted it too easily, or out of concern of the goodness or badness of the thing we accept (whether or not it's reasonable). But this is more of a *feeling* than a method.