I saw your original post and thought it was a question worth asking because here as much as anywhere there is a taste hierarchy and unspoken rules re: what you can like. OTOH it was rather unfair to both Barty and Reynolds, both of whom have championed "cheesy" music - in fact, Simon was one of the very few critics who argued that "wobble/Bristol" was the truly Avant/hardcore flowering of dubstep.
I was sufficiently "sophisticated" by the time I was a dubstep fan to find wobble boring, especially as I'd been so into what came (slightly) before it. But when I first got into electronic music, it was two pills and a night of jump up drum n bass that did it, and although I can't comfortably return to the world of Clipz and Pendulum (too old, probably, and too enamoured of more complex/"subtle" music) now, I always think that the fact I loved that music then doesn't mean that I am a better person with better taste now, and that actually in some ways I've lost something very precious by leaving behind the naivety and intensity of that first love affair with drugs and cheesy synth lines.
People on here tend to be somewhat intellectual and ruminative, and so we're all very adept at arguing for the validity of our in truth probably rather arbitrary sensibilities.
My inner counterargument to this runs that if you only ever read Spot the Dog you'd think it was the best book ever written, until you read (insert your favourite book here). Spot the Dog retains its charm and it's usefulness as a book to let children read, but once you've read something more sophisticated you can't help but see its limitations. I pick that book for no particular reason and I don't mean to patronise fans of DJ Hype (current form) as childlike. But although part of me rejects the concept of good taste, another part of me balks at that rejection with the sense that there IS better and worse art and a sense of this has to be cultivated.
NB: music tends to be (at least on a surface level) apolitical, but other artforms can be MORALLY objectionable, and worth denigrating. Perhaps it's worth denigrating music, too, but harder to establish upon what grounds.