I used to detest drop bars, used the drops no more than 5 percent of the time.
Then I lost about 15 percent of my body weight, most of that was from the abdomen. And suddenly riding in the drops was much more comfortable.
Last spring I signed up for a 200k brevet, the forecast was no more than about 15 km/hr winds, but at the start it was clear that the forecast was quite wrong. First 80 km was pushing into a really strong head wind. A few times per hour I would sit more upright for a few minutes, but rode about 90 percent of that first 40 percent of the brevet in the drops.
The tops of my drop bars are about the same height as the top of the saddle. So, when I am riding in the drops, I am probably more upright than a pro cyclist is when they are on the hoods, as their bars are exceptionally low.
Each of us has our own opinions, that is mine. The stronger the headwind, the more valuable the drop bars are to me.
But I certainly understand that some do not like using the drops. A friend of mine used to ride with drop bars, never used the drops. So, he converted one of his bikes to the bars in the photo, I think they are called bull horn bars. Note his bar end shifters on the ends. This is on his touring bike. His hand positions are very similar to riding on the hoods on drop bars.