I don't take it as insults. My main point is that Gold Dollars have the reputation they have because they are popular for a cheap razor. From people who hone but don't sell them I have seen reports of very low rates of unusable blades from them even in the 66 which by all accounts is the bottom end of the current Gold Dollar line. From what I have found most of the negatives I have seen are either about the scales which are terrible, or related to getting an unfinished or poorly finished blade.
Don't misunderstand me I am not saying it is a must have. Only that the forums push vintage and restores and while that will likely get you better quality than a GD, there is a little bit of a gamble with that if you don't know razors and don't hone or restore them. Maybe not in quality if you find the right source but in not getting something that isn't finished or needs work. Some may be nervous about using someone else's razor.
Basically it depends on what your expectations and comfort level are.
I would probably have stuck with the replaceable blade straight until I got used to the process. Then probably still get the same Gold Dollar with the same understanding that it was going to be cheap and replaced in 6 months or a year.
I just don't want someone looking at this because they want to get a boyfriend a straight razor but 55 bucks for a vintage is still a little steep for something they aren't sure he will like thinking that they can't look at that Gold Dollar from a reputable vendor because it will turn his face into hamburger meat. It won't if they hone it right and apparently grind the heel back. Several shops know how to evaluate and finish these. If you are a college kid or teenager and your boyfriend has an interest in it there aren't a lot of good options. For the money you can get the best of the bottom of the barrel, something you can't look at but says it has cosmetic issues and is used, or a project piece that he can learn metal working skills on.
It can still be a viable starter, if you research the seller and ask them about their process. Doesn't hurt if they have a lifetime honing deal where you just send it and they hone it and return it. Or a good return policy.