Looking for a rubber that produces lots of spin but doesn't react to spin is, I think, a fool's errand. What makes a rubber able to produce spin is the same thing that makes it react to spin. In any case, especially in this regard, the differences between rubbers are minor and subtle. I remember someone posting that Rakza 7 produced twice as much spin as Rakza 9 - I've tried both, perhaps you could convince me that Rakza 7 produces more spin than Rakza 9, but twice as much???? Unless someone produces high speed video demonstrating this, I'd find this hard to believe.
In any case... learning to handle spin is part of learning to play table tennis. If you need to find something that doesn't react to spin, you'd end up with anti or long pips, and going to something like that just because you haven't figured out how to handle spin with regular inverted rubbers is a bad mistake, especially if you're just starting. There are definitely reasons to use anti or long pips, and some of them involve controlling incoming spin, but doing it because you haven't learned how to do it yet with inverted rubbers is bad since these rubbers have their own weaknesses.
And what I'm saying is that, even with the likes of Evolution MX-P (which actually warns you on the packet that it's ONLY meant to be used by expert players, which I am not..
) and Tenergy 05, I haven't found them to be unusable due to excessive speed OR spin. In fact, I found them as easy (or as hard) to use as much "lesser" rubbers. Mind you, if I were using a OFF++ carbon blade I might have come to a different conclusion.
Iskandar