Can you provide an example of two primary button stacked near each other in a good design?
It's not about which action is highlighted and which action is not, it's about not having two primary action near one-another which goes against any UI/UX theory and best practice
What if both actions are equally valid? What does UI/UX theory say about that? Honest question here. I see how having two primary buttons would look ugly, but inducing the user to pick the choice they didn't want (because they were just pressing next and didn't stop to read the "skip" button in the small print) seems even worse UX to me.
It's not about which action is highlighted and which action is not, it's about not having two primary action near one-another which goes against any UI/UX theory and best practice