There are no stupid questions, although I think you may have meant GCEA, not CGEA? Also, you may find that because many of the questions like the one you're asking come down to personal preference, there are no easy answers. I have a baritone that was strung GCEA when I bought it (from the UU marketplace forum), and it was fine but it sounded a lot like my tenor, which was strung at the time with a low g. The upside was that the chord shapes had the same names as the ones I'd learned for my tenor ukulele, but I wanted the baritone ukulele to sound less like an ukulele and a bit more like a guitar. I ended up restringing it to DGBE tuning using a string set in which the D and G were both wound for that more metallic guitar sound. I prefer it with DGBE tuning because with its more guitar-like sound, I think it would better complement another ukulele if I want to record them together. The downside is that while the chord shapes are the same, the chords themselves are different (for example, the chord shape for a C chord in GCEA tuning is a G chord in DGBE tuning), so playing along with a tenor uke on aDGBE baritone is like learning the song in a different key. If you can find a baritone ukulele strung for GCEA tuning (at an ukulele player gathering, for example, or someplace that sells used ukuleles), or if you can find one being played on YouTube (perform a search for "baritone ukulele GCEA"), it may help you decide which tuning you'd prefer on a baritone.