Don't try to be smart with me boyo, it's not working. Adding "ergo" to a point doesn't make it any more valid, especially when your previous posts demonstrate just how poorly you understand the American legal system.
Literally nothing that I've said points to the idea that Roberts bases his decisions on being popular. What I can tell you is that based off statements he's made, he purports to decide cases in a way that supports the idea that the Supreme Court is apolitical in its decisionmaking. Literally everyone realizes that it's completely untrue, but Roberts has made many of his decisions based on the idea that he can't permit the Court to become overly conservative or liberal, hence some of his ideologically inconsistent ideas. What he is very consistent about is to maintain the originalist interpretation of certain fundamental constitutional principles that have been unduly expanded. These include the Commerce Clause and Constitutional doctrines relating to the administrative state.
I'm sorry if you don't understand that the modern interpretation of the Commerce Clause, which was originally meant to solely regulate interstate and international commerce that has been bloated to justify almost any government action against private citizens, including the drug war, environmental regulation, antidiscrimination laws, wiretapping, and Rico and gun laws, should be abhorrent to any basic American conservative. Just because you can't recognize that Roberts has taken very strong conservative stances on these key issues doesn't mean he's all of a sudden the next incarnation of Earl Warren.