Yes, if law enforcement has an arrest warrant for you, they can search your residence looking for you. They have a right to look anywhere a reasonable person might believe you can hide. They cannot search a drawer next to your bed.
Yes they have a right to go into your house without your permission if the warrant is in hand. You can give over the keys to your residence, or you can have your door kicked off the hinges. (I'd only ask nicely once). Yes they can block you from searching the residence in your presence, if they are executing an arrest warrant. Officer safety makes this one obvious.
You call them arrogant assholes who appear to be breaking the law. I call them pussies for saying please too many times.
Another question/scenario -
I've done nothing wrong. I have not committed a crime today or last week or any time in recent history. Let's say I have a really good reason to believe my wife hasn't either.
If police kick my door in or insist on taking my keys from me and only flash a warrant in front of me without letting me really read it, what rights do I have to protect myself?
If a man kicked down my door and claimed that my wife stole his suitcase of money and demanded that he search my house looking for it, I could physically detain him and if he initiated any violent acts, I could probably get away with shooting him dead in my house.
If a cop busted down my door and went upstairs while a second cop blocked me from going upstairs, what gives them the right to do so? If I felt they were searching my house unwarranted, could I call the police on them?