"They overturned something called The Chevron Deference"
Sweetheart -- and I really mean that, it's not meant condescendingly -- the Chevron opinion was anything but democratic. It placed rule-making authority squarely in the hands of unelected bureaucrats and instructed courts -- which are our last line of defense against administrative and legislative excess -- to defer to them. I haven't read the Chevron opinion, so I don't know what the Court was thinking at the time; and Court decisions are not only the products of the Courts that issue them. They are also products of the times, and it is not altogether fair to judge decisions made under different circumstances by the changed circumstances of today. So, I do not judge.
But the effect of Chevron was that administrative agencies were performing the work of Congress -- which Congress, populated by the political class (and, if you don't understand the implications of that, you should write about something else), is all-too-ready to let them do. It's a no-risk option, for Congress. Chevron was a golden ticket for Congress, a way for them to throw up their hands and say, "We didn't do it," and win re-election. Cowards.
Democracy is tough stuff. It requires work on the part of the governed, and on the part of their elected representatives. Lazy, character-challenged Congresspeople are all-too-willing to defer to administrative agencies and sleep their way through another election; those are the people you should be pissed at, not the Court. The Court is simply saying, "There is a limit to how much legislative authority Congress can deflect to administrative agencies." End of story. If you have a complaint in a particular case, or a particular class of cases, well, that's the price you pay for living under a government that separates powers in order to preserve individual freedom. The only reason you don't understand that already is that your education is one in name only; you have been cheated.
"They’re just pointing every political weapon they have at our Constitution secretly, so when they pull the triggers simultaneously to destroy it, you won’t even know what happened."
This is very far off the mark. I don't think it would be useful to delve into it here, however.