I was hoping 72blueNblu would chime in since he has a well thought out set up with drop spindles.
Are drop spindles better than bigger bars...it depends on your vehicle weight, engine, road condition, driving style and applications, tires, shocks, and a number of other nuances.
If you have a cruiser, with a small block, and your roads are kind of wavy, drop spindles may work best. $500 for spindles, control the motion of $100 with of Monroe gas magnums, and an alignment for $100 and you down the road after a weekends worth of work.
If you drive aggressively, have a big block and you roads are full of pot holes, bigger spring rates and improved shocks may work best. $300 for t-bars, $200 for new leaves, and $400 for shocks and a weekend worth of work may be the solution. I'm including replacement leafs here because if you step up the front rate, you will need to step up the rear rate to match.
You still have the snubber hitting issue to deal with. If you have the stock unit and you don't change the leaf springs, you may need to manipulate your pinion angle some to turn the nose down, lift the rear slightly, or use a shorter bumper. This makes for another argument for changing to a stepped up rate in back, or adding some clamps or half leaves to the front segment to reduce the twist allow the housing to rotate.