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June 21, 2022 53 mins
The CHAUNCEY Show-Meet Scott Neely for Governor of Arizona. Scott states "I am running for governor of Arizona to promote greater prosperity for all working Arizona families. I know hard work just like you, whether you wear a hard hat, uniform, apron, scrubs or a suit, I will lead the charge for all workers and small business people from the dirt to the boardroom. I promise to represent everyone, acting as your voice in government advocating for you and defending your interests and values. As a conservative, a laborer and multiple small business owner, I will work tirelessly to set Arizona on a sustainable fiscal path. I will spearhead efforts to further diversify all sectors of Arizona’s economy creating more jobs in technology, manufacturing, agriculture, finance, energy, research, education and tourism. I will work for a stronger and fairer Arizona economy, one that includes everyone. I will fight for election integrity, attract businesses to create the best jobs and raise wages for economic equity, ensure all Arizonans have access to quality affordable healthcare, build a clean energy economy and address the affordable housing crisis our communities are facing. Most importantly, I will make an unprecedented investment and reset in K-12, college and trade school education and training. There are many tough issues ahead for all of Arizonans, requiring a strong voice that will firmly adhere to the Constitution without compromise. I’m ready to deliver the kind of leadership for the people of Arizona to help families recover financially from the pandemic and tackling environment issues as Arizona’s population continues to grow. Join national political commentator/patriot host Chauncey I. Brown III and gubernatorial candidate Scott Neely for an exciting conversation about Arizona and the state of the nation.
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Episode Transcript

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(00:00):
Love, help, radiance. Thisis the Jauncy Show where we're always right

(01:23):
and never left. We put Godfirst in politics second. I'm your patriot,
Host Chauncy Brown, Welcome to theshow today. We are excited to
have a gentleman that is a bluecollar worker working in the trenches most of
his life. Wants to provide abetter life for all of those in Arizona.

(01:47):
He wants to make sure that everykid has an opportunity at a quality
education. He wants to make surethat every homeless person has a place to
live. And you want to makesure of the safety of Arizona by securing
their borders. Scott Neely has hada tremendous time running for office. They

(02:19):
have pushed him away at every term, but his resilient, his resolve to
keep fighting back because he wants torepresent you is the type of leadership that
we need today. So, withoutany further ado, let me welcome into
the studio my dear friend and boobnatorialcandidate for Arizona, mister Scott Neely.

(02:46):
Thank you, Johncy. I appreciateit and I agree with you, and
we need a god fearing, competent, principled man running the State of Arizona.
Arizona has some of the biggest problemsand challenges in the country right now,
and we have a lot that weneed to do, and we need
people to have a spine like mewho are willing to do something. First

(03:09):
thing I'm going to do is I'mgoing to finish the arison a border walk.
That's the first thing I'm gonna do. At least, I'm going to
let you continue because I know there'sa lot that we're going to talk about
today and unpack, and I knowthat the border is a very important and
sensitive issue to you for my listenerson the Chauncey Shows. For the first

(03:31):
time you're here, just talk alittle bit about who you are. You're
not a politician, never enter anoffice in my life. Yeah, you're
a blue collar worker. Talk alittle bit about who Scott is, and
then what made you decide to getinvolved in politics. Well, I'm a
guy who started by sweeping my father'swarehouse at his material supply company when I

(03:55):
was a child, making about threebucks a day. I'd worked all day
to make about three bucks, andthen I'd also pull the weeds on the
fence line, you know, Andthis is stuff I was doing at five
years old. By the time Iwas fifteen, I was stalking drywall,
loading trucks with block brick and cementbags. And by the time I was

(04:16):
sixteen, I started my own landscapebusiness and then ventured into doing concrete work.
And then at twenty four I startedAction Concrete Pumping and started pumping concrete
and finishing it. And then eventuallyI started Action Concrete Pumping supply in twenty
eighteen, and then I started sellingconcrete pumping equipment all over the country and
then flying everywhere and training people howto operate the machinery that I sold them

(04:40):
so that they'd be confident in whatthey were doing in their business. And
then I also build websites and doonline marketing, but I don't do that
for others. I've always just doneit for my own self use for my
own business promotion and marketing. Butwhat I do is I train a lot
of my customers that are starting theirown businesses how to do that as well,
so that they are a triple threatand they too can be somebody that

(05:01):
can make it in their in theirbusiness, in their small business, in
their area, their community, intheir state. So I'm somebody who's already
been providing trade school type schooling ata at a low cost for a lot
of years to help a lot ofbusiness. I think I've started more companies.
I know I've started more companies thanany candidate running for Arizona governor.

(05:25):
There isn't a candidate running that startedas many companies as I have of my
own, as well as all thecompanies I've helped to assist other other people
in starting. So I'm a veryum. I put my heart into everything
I do, and I want tomake sure others are as successful as I
am because it's not about me,It's about we. It's about all of

(05:49):
us. And then that's what leadershipis about. It's about bringing those up
with you rise to success together.That's right. There's no I in team,
it's we. And this is thetype of leadership that we need today
that we're lacking, not only inas of Arizona, but across the country.

(06:15):
You know, people that really wantto serve people, talk about trying
you talk about some of the otherimportant issues. Infrastructure. You've been in
the infrastructures, Yeah, I've beeninvolved in infrastructure in Arizona for almost two
decades, about seventeen years. Differentinfrastructure I've been involved with is the Palavert

(06:38):
Nuclear Power Plant. I've been involvedwith the horse Masa Dam project where they
did a lot of restorations on theroads. I've been involved with SRP,
which is Salt River Project projects electricalsubstations for them as well as canals canal
systems. I've done a lot ofgunnit and shot create on their canal systems.

(06:59):
I've done a lot of repairs onthe Central Arizona Project canal systems that
take water from the Colorado River allthe way to Tucson and all the way
through Phoenix, and I've been involvedwith that for many, many years.
So I've been involved in water rechargewhere you recharge water down into the well
see you can refill the aquifers throughoutthe state. And I want to be

(07:21):
involved in building or building a biggerdesalinization plant in Yuma, Arizona, where
we currently have one that was builtby the Army Corps of Engineers back in
nineteen ninety two. I'd like toexpand upon it. I'd like to make
it bigger. I'd like to takethe Israeli technology, use that technology to

(07:42):
desalinate water that we can pipe infrom Mexico and then clean it up and
provide jobs right here in Arizona,right here in America. A man,
you know, it sounds like youhave a great understanding of the infrastructure of
Arizona. What are some of theproblems that are plaguing your state? The

(08:05):
water water we're you know, ina stage three drought right now. We
need to we need to get waterinto this state, and desalonizing is something
that can be done. I've gotmy opponents that we're saying that we should
be salonized in Mexico and then sendthe clean water pipe this way. I
disagree. I think we send asalty water pipe this way and desalonize right

(08:30):
here in Arizona. Provide jobs forAmericans, not for people in other countries.
I've had enough of outsourcing everything.We need to end source things.
We need to begin to build forour people. We need to build our
technology, our infrastructure, our resources, and we need to build up our
workforces. And the only way tobuild it up is with knowledge. And

(08:52):
the only way you can gain knowledgeis through schooling and the college system,
the community college system and the statecollege system. Arizona do not put any
focus whatsoever on trades. We needvocational trade schools here in Arizona, and
when I become governor, that's somethingI'm going to lobby harder than anybody's ever

(09:13):
lobbied in their life, because it'ssomething that's necessary. There is a lack
of tradesmen in this country. That'sa nationwide problems, but Arizona is growing
really fast and it's a big problemhere. We don't have the tradesmen we
need, absolutely absolutely. What aresome of the other things. Well,

(09:35):
we've talked about trades before, andyeah, I know. Also while we're
talking about trades, we've also we'vealso talked about inmates that are in prison.
Yeah, I would like to,Yeah, I would like to do
a prison to trade school pipeline.I'd like to do some trade schools within

(09:56):
the prisons themselves, but I wouldalso like to have something that they could
come out to and maybe get grantedmoney to go back to trade school when
they get out of prison, sothat they can create a trade for themselves.
So that with then maybe say twoyears of getting out of prison,
they're in a decent paying job,maybe maybe fifty sixty thousand dollars a year

(10:18):
up to one hundred thousand year dependingon what kind of trade they go into,
as well as being able to starttheir own business if they want to
do that, all right, youknow, yeah, Actually, they do
provide grants for prisoners. That's what'sodd, because they provide grants for prisoners
to start their own business, butthey don't provide grants for them to go
to school to learn a trade sothat they can start their own business.

(10:41):
So it's kind of an oxymoron,and a lot of them don't take advantage
of it because if you don't haveany skills to go start that business,
it's kind of pointless. Maybe that'swhy they offer the grant because they know
you can't really take advantage of it. But in the way that I would
do it, you would be ableto take advantage of it because you'd get
the knowledge from the trade school andthen with that knowledge, it's so much
easier to start a business. Absolutely, we're going to take a quick commercial

(11:07):
break and we're going to be backwith candidate for Governor of Arizona, Scott
Deeley. I want to be yourinfrastructure governor. Now I've been involved in
infrastructure construction throughout Arizona during the lastseventeen years. I've traveled more than half

(11:31):
a million miles across the Arizona Roadsand I've watched the roads decay over the
last seventeen years. Rural communities needspecial attention with infrastructure dollars, and as
your infrastructure dollar watchdog, I wantto make sure that your tax dollars are
spent on the right projects in theright places. Vote Neely for Governor in

(11:52):
the August second primary election, paidfor by Neely for Arizona. Welcome back
to the Chauncy Show. Were alwaysright and never left. We put God
first in politics. Second, I'myour patriot host Johncy Brown. We're honored,
blessed, and proud to have itin the studio. The working Man's
Governor I call him. Scott Neely'srunning for governor of Arizona, and he

(12:16):
wants to do some tremendous things forthe people there. We were just talking
about the trades, the prisoner tradepipeline, in trade schools and colleges.
These are the type of things thatwe need in order to develop a community
and also to prevent re citicism inour prison systems. Scott and I as

(12:41):
well. I remember having a conversationwith you. We also talked about life
skills in prison. Yes, andif you want to talk about all,
you know, talk a little bitabout that. We'd like to be able
to help them learn how to docertain things. I'll let you speak undiscuss.
Yeah. Absolutely, Still, lifeskills is something I think we need

(13:03):
to teach in high school. Butif first for those that didn't make it
through high school and for those thatended up in prison, we need to
teach it to them in prison.Because life skills is a lot of things.
It's it's to learn how to cook, it's to learn how to clean,
it's to learn how to manage acheckbook. It's to learn how to
read a balance sheet. It's tolearn how to build credit and the process

(13:28):
that it takes to build credit andhow you do that and how you go
about that. A lot of peoplejust don't know how to do these things,
and how to buy a car,how to buy a home. But
all these things are related to thelife skills. All these things are related
to the credit, and a lotof people don't know how to build that.
I was fortunate and I had peopleteach me these things. I was

(13:52):
very fortunate, and I've I've passedthese things along to my children, and
they've got great credit and they're inpositions to when hopefully, you know,
the price of homes come down,they're in positions to be able to go
out and buy their first home andbuild their life. Right now, they've
bought cars, and they've got creditcards and they're managing their finance as well,
and their credit scores are in theseven hundreds and eight hundreds. And

(14:13):
that's because I taught them how todo that. Unfortunately, you're not born
with that knowledge. You have tobe taught that knowledge. And if you're
not taught it in high school,you'll probably end up in prison. And
then if you do end up inprison, you need to at least be
taught it while in prison so thatwhen you get out you have a whole
lot better chance of making it.And it lowers that recidivism rate so that

(14:37):
we don't have them going back toprison because once again they were they were
not able to make it, andthen did some dumb things to try to
make it and to we want toprevent that, We want to stop that.
We want people to make good decisions, and to make good decisions,
they have to have knowledge. Knowledgeis key to good decision making in life.
And I want to pass that knowledgeonto the people. And then absolutely,

(15:01):
you know, Scott, as I'mlistening to you talk right now,
I remember when I was in grammarschool where we of course that was a
long time ago, in the sixtiesseventies, where we had life skills,
home economics. I even learned sewingin school. You know, some of

(15:22):
these things they really need to bringback, especially life skills and even balancing
a check. All that stuff reallyshould be done at the grammar school level,
you know, Yeah, you know, and yeah, and it's sad
that this country, this administration,wants to push false narrative of CRT and

(15:46):
all these other things that do nothelp our children. They want to push
CRT and make it seem like we'rea racist nation when we know that we're
not. In my lifetime, ithas not been a racist nation. It
has not been a racist nation inmy lifetime. I'm forty one years old
and I grew up around all colorsof people, and this nation is not

(16:10):
racist. Nor should this nation bebeing fed gender ideologies, especially to kids.
You know, Obviously, adults candecide what they want to do with
their lives, but children should notbe fed gender ideologies or you know,
sexual things at a young age oror crt. You know, you know,

(16:34):
you should not teach you know,white kids that they're responsible for you
know, Black kids, you know, downfall. We are responsible for our
own upswings as well as our owndownfalls. And I can speak to that.
I've had many downfalls and I wasresponsible for those and nobody else.

(16:56):
We need people to take accountability fortheir actions. That's what we need.
Responsibility. Take responsibility for your actions. But that needs to be taught because
right now they're teaching these kids thatthey're not responsible for their actions, and
then we have these gun shootings atschools happening, and the kids don't feel

(17:18):
responsible and it's somebody else's fault asto why they did it, but it's
not. It's their fault, andit had something to do with their upbringing
and it had something to do withthe way the government is essentially not instilling
in in American people the act ofresponsibility and for being responsible for one's actions.

(17:45):
We are all responsible for our actions, and that needs to be taught.
Again. The way to teach itis to bring back discipline. We
don't have discipline in the household,We definitely don't have it in the schools.
And it shows. It shows societistthat does its D is decaying.
Society is decaying because of lack ofdiscipline, lack of responsibility, lack of

(18:11):
accountability, and this is something thatneeds to change and it needs to change.
Chast But I like to switch gearsbecause the Arizona GOP has a lack
of accountability and responsibility for their actions. But as you know, I'm holding
the AZYGP responsible for their actions andthe chairman, Kelly Ward, I am

(18:33):
personally holding her responsible for her actions. And what she's done is she's favored
one candidate during a primary election.And I'm going to say the candidate's name.
The candidate she's favoring is Kerry Lake. She's bashing Matt Salmon, she's
bashing Karen Taylor Robson, she's ignoringPaula Tuliani Z and she's ignoring Scott Neely.

(18:59):
By the way, that's me.She's received the lawsuit, she's now
responded. She's trying to have thecase dismissed by a judge. It's not
gonna work. I've gathered more evidencesince. And what's interesting, as they've
done they would not do the AZGPdebates with five governors. They did it

(19:22):
with one governor, only Kerry Lake. They featured her as the guest speaker
that night because she was so braveand she would show and nobody else would,
even though I wasn't invited, bythe way, And they finally did
the Arizona Attorney general debates last night, and oddly enough, five of them
were there. So they can havefive candidates there for an attorney general debate,

(19:45):
but not five candidates for a governor'sdebate. Makes no sense to me.
And her use was well, ScottNeely was not pulling five percent,
and that was a stipulation, bythe way, it wasn't in the by
laws. And even in her responsehe mentions though it wasn't in the by
laws. I made a decision notto invite him because he was pulling under
five percent. She's broken the law. I'm holding her accountable. I'm holding

(20:08):
the az GOP accountable. They've costme a lot of money and donations I
would have otherwise maybe be unable tocollect. But because people aren't knowing who
I am. It does hamper one'sability to fund raise, and they're going
to find out through this lawsuit thatthey've broken the law. I am holding

(20:30):
them accountable for their action and wewill see how that goes. We're going
to take a quick commercial break thatwe're going to be back. Kennedy for
Governor of Arizona, Scott Kelley.On day one, as you're governor,

(20:53):
I will deploy the Arizona National Guardto the border and I will begin construction
on three strategic National Guard border barracksso that we can maintain a permanent presence
on the Arizona Mexico border. Voteknee Lee for Governor in the August second
primary election, paid for by Neelyfor Arizona. Welcome back to the Chauncy

(21:17):
Show. We're always right and neverleft. We put God first in politics,
second on your patriots, Chauncy Brown. Scott. By listening to you
before we went to break, itseems that you've had an uphill battle in
your candidacy for governor in Arizona,and it is very unfortunate because these people

(21:40):
are supposed to be representing the peopleand they're representing special interest personal interests.
But you wanted to comments, I'lllet you get ahead. What they've done
is illegal and it is in litigation, and I know I will win the
day in court. I'm not worriedabout it. And as a matter of

(22:00):
fact, I'm glad they made ittough on me because I get bored really
easy. So it's making it fun, making it really, really fun.
I'm having a good time. Trustme, I have never had so much
fun in my life. As tothe day I entered the race for Arizona
governor on January nineteenth, at theTrump rally, I am having an absolute

(22:22):
blast. A lot of other peopleare miserable as they're running for office,
and I'm over here just loving it, enjoying it. Putting in twenty hours
a day, seven days a week, and you know what, that's not
enough. I wish I could putin, you know, twenty four hours
a day, seven days a week. But I do got to get a
little bit of a couple of hoursto sleep at night. Absolutely, you're

(22:44):
definitely the working man's governor, andI'm looking forward, buddy. I'm a
work dollar. I am the middleI am the middle class might behind the
Arizona fight to save our nation.Amen. Amen, I would like to
talk about education. Can I talkabout education with you? Would you believe

(23:07):
Scott? That's what I was saying. Okay, beautiful, we're on the
one traft mind. I'd love it, always right and never left. That's
right, exactly all right. Sohere's the thing. My son's graduated from
high school a month ago, andabout five weeks ago I went to go
talk to a counselor because my son, Tristan was getting a getting a sea

(23:29):
in English and he's a trade astudent and English is his best subject.
So I said, well, what'sgoing on with this? So I went
to go talk to the counselor andthe counselor says, yeah, he's getting
in like a seventy nine percent ofsee. I said, that doesn't make
any sense. So I texted him, you know, while I was there
talking to counselor, and my son'stexted me back, how you know this
teacher just doesn't treat him that well. And a lot of it has to
do with me running for aers ona governor and she's a liberal and he

(23:52):
said, she's an extra leader andshe hates she hates me, you know,
or whatever. Hates my value,my conservative values or whatever. So
anyway, she was she was notputting. She was not entering in test
scores and scores on projects he hadturned in or assignments he had turned in,
and ninety days had gone by,so like a whole quarter, and
it's like, what's going on here? So I wanted to talk to the

(24:17):
vice principle about it, and shetook me over to talk to one of
the vice principles. And I said, one of the vice principles. I
said, that's weird. So Isat down. I had a conversation with
the vice principles. I said,you know, the counselor said, over
there. The academic counselor said,which, by the way, there's eight
of them. I can't believe there'seight academic counselors, four guidance counselors,
as it seems a little preposterous.But anyway, so she said one of

(24:37):
the vice principles, So you're oneof the vice principles. How many vice
principles are here at masa Hi,I asked, and he said five,
And I said, well, nowit all makes sense. And he goes,
what and I go, well,why when we gave the red for
ed raises, the money didn't makeit to the teachers. Now I know
where it's going. You've got eightacademic counselors trying to push all kids in

(25:00):
to college, even though not allkids are built for college. Some need
to go to trade schools if wehad them, but we don't. But
there's five vice principles and these areprobably one hundred thousand dollars a year high
paying jobs. And it doesn't makeany sense because when I graduated high school,
we had a really big high schoolat five thousand kids and we only
had one vice principal. Masa Highhas got thirty five hundred kids and it's

(25:21):
got five vice principles making one hundredgrand a year apiece roughly. You know,
if we cut four of those,we could hire eight new teachers,
right, Eight new teachers could behired at Masa High. If we got
rid of four vice principles, thatwould actually take the class sizes down,
That would improve the education, Thatwould give the teacher the ability to keep
a better eye on a smaller groupof kids, and then that would give

(25:42):
the teacher the ability to decipher ifone of the kids is having troubles at
home, and then maybe we couldget that kid help, and then maybe
we could prevent the next school shooterif we had smaller class sizes and we
had teachers who could actually pay attentionto the group that they have. But
when the group's too big, youjust cannot pay attention to everybody. You

(26:03):
know. We need to shrink theclass sizes. We need to get these
kids a better education, and theway to do it is shrink the administration
at the high school level, atthe junior high school level, at the
elementary school level, at the districtlevel. We need to cut back on
the number of administrators and start raisingthe pay of the good teachers, and

(26:26):
then do merit based pay for theseteachers. If they're good teachers, we're
going to give them a raise.And the teachers that you know, such
as my son's English teacher, Idon't know about the race for her,
but anyway, we'll have to visitthat later. But it nevertheless, we
need these teachers to be taken careof. It's hard enough to find good

(26:48):
teachers, and it's much harder ifyou don't pay them well. We need
to take care of that problem,and we do it by shrinking administration.
And combining school districts. There's twohundred and seventeen school districts in Arizona.
Imagine if we cut that down bya third the administrative costs we would save
in the millions. Arizona fifty sixpercent of the budget every year goes to

(27:11):
schooling. That's university's K through twelveand that's community college. Fifty six percent
of the entire Arizona budget goes toschooling. So it's not a problem of
we're not putting enough money towards it. We are putting plenty of money towards
it, but the money's not filteringdown to the teachers or the classrooms.

(27:33):
And that, sir, is aproblem here in Arizona, and that's why
we're ranked forty ninth in the nationand education and it's a disaster. It's
a catastrophe. We got kids herethat are graduating and they're not even reading
and writing properly. This is wrong. You know, if we shrink the
administration closed down some of them oldadministrative buildings, what we could do as

(27:56):
we could do those, we couldturn some of them old administrative buildings into
a non English speaking language tutoring centersso that we could then put a lot
of the kids that are not speakingEnglish in those schooling centers and get them
caught up with the rest of thestudents so that they too can have a
good education. There's so many thingswe can do, but we got to

(28:19):
cut back on the administrators to doit. Yeah, the educational system is
even on the national level, theunions stremely corrupt, top heavy. It's
really sad what the public education systemhas turned into. I mean, I
serve two terms as a school boardmember in the third largest district in New

(28:41):
Jersey, and there must have beena tough job. It was, but
I enjoyed it. But you're right, the unions, the top heaviness.
Yes, and you're talking about atthe time, maybe it was like fourteen
or fifteen thousand dollars they were payingfor pupil and teachers were still going out

(29:02):
and buying supplies. Yeah, itdoesn't make sense, doesn't make any sense
at all. And we have thesame problem too. You have four vice
principles in high school. Yeah,we've had that problem over there in New
Jersey too. That's happening there too. Yes, sir, it's a national
problem that is systemic and the educationalsystem. I didn't know that was a

(29:25):
national problem. I had no idea, And actually I didn't know there was
five vice principles at my son's highschool until I went in there to talk
to them. Had I not goneinto the office. Because my son's a
good kid, he's never been introuble, so I've never had a reason
to go talk to the school.But and I think a lot of people
I've got, they haven't had areason to go talk to the school.
So I went and found this outby total accident. And when I hear
these politicians spend their you know,their talking points, Oh it's top heavy

(29:47):
administration list and that, I didn'tknow what the heck they were talking about.
And I think most people don't knowwhat they're talking about. But once
I got my eyes on the problemand realized there's five vice principles at one
high school, now I know whatthey mean by that. But instead of
talking about it in a circular fashionthat nobody understands what you're saying, I
talk direct at the problem. Iwant people to know it's a good old
boy system and they're taking our money, throwing it in the trash can and

(30:11):
lighting it on fire for their friends, so that their friends can benefit in
higher positions, in administrative positions,sitting on their deaths, making big money,
not providing an education for the students. You're absolutely correct. You're absolutely
correct. The public school system inAmerica is and has failed our children.

(30:36):
Yes, it has. We needto do something about it, state by
state. It's unfortunate. I mean, really, we should abolish the national
education having the national school boards Ideserved. It's another waste of bureaucracy,
of money. I'd even like toabolish Arizona Department of Education. I think
it's it's not necessary. Let theschool districts manage their education district by district,

(31:00):
exactly exactly, you know, Andlike I said, the creation,
let the districts compete, Let thestates compete. That's what America was designed
to do. Is designed to becompetitive. It was designed to be capitalist.
And when you compete, you producethe best. When you stop competing
and just keep handing money out,you produce what we have now, and

(31:22):
it's not the best. No,you're right. We have people that well.
They that's their goal is to havepeople dependent on the government. They
don't want people to be critical thinkers, They don't want people to be entrepreneurs.
They want people to rely on thegovernment as their daddy. That's what
the left relies on all the time. And the only people that keeps suffering

(31:48):
from it's the middle class. That'sright. I'm tired of the middle class
having to bleed. I'm done.This country is controlled by aligarchs. It's
controlled by Amazon and Walmart, Googleand Facebook and Twitter and Target and all
these big woke corporations that are workingin collaboration with China to enrich themselves on

(32:10):
a global level but hurting the Americanmiddle class. I am done. I
am tired of this. I've hadenough. I'm rising up. People are
rising up with me. We're notgoing to put up with it anymore.
We're tired of tax policy that benefitsthese oligarchy type, giant type corporations where

(32:31):
they don't pay any taxes and wepay all the burdens. We the middle
class, sold all the tax burdenin the United States, or the vast
majority of it. We're tired ofit, and we're not going to take
it anymore. We've had enough.We're rising up. That's why I rose
up to run for this office,and I am not going to give up.

(32:52):
They can keep knocking me down.I'll keep getting up. They can
keep knocking me down. I'll keepgetting up. I don't quit. I
will need the establishment until I haveno needles left to needle with a then
absolutely we're going to take a quickcommercial break and wanting to be back with
candidate for Governor, Scott Neely.I want to be your infrastructure governor.

(33:25):
Now. I've been involved in infrastructureconstruction throughout Arizona during the last seventeen years.
I've traveled more than half a millionmiles across to Arizona roads and I've
watched the roads decay over the lastseventeen years. Rural communities need special attention
with infrastructure dollars, and as yourinfrastructure dollar watchdog, I want to make

(33:47):
sure that your tax dollars are spenton the right projects in the right places.
Vote Neely for Governor in the Augustsecond primary election. Paid for by
Neely for Arizona. Welcome back tothe Chauncey Show, where we're always right
and never left. We put Godfirst in politics. Second, I'm your
patriot host, Chauncey Brown. We'rehonored, proud, and blessed to have

(34:09):
in the studio today. I callhim the working Man's Governor. Scott nearly
candidate for governor of Arizona. Scott, I want to talk a little bit
about business in Arizona. We hada conversation offline as it relates to concrete.

(34:30):
M We have a major concrete shortagein the state of Arizona. And
please, I want you to talkabout that because we had, like I
said, an offline conversation. Andwhen it's cutting into seventy percent of your
business and you have to potentially leadpeople off, I'll let you talk about

(34:54):
the concrete crisis in Arizona. Yeah, resolutely. So the crisis began two
years ago that the Navajo Generating Station, which produced a lot of flash which
we blend into our concrete products,was shut down by the Bide administration.
I don't know why, because weupgraded that station eight years ago and it

(35:15):
was supposed to be good for twentyyears and it was producing. It was
the cleanest coal fired power plant inthe United States. It was the most
updated with the newest technology, andit was clean coal. It was what
Trump used to talk about clean coal. And so Biden came in and he
shut her down and they tore downto the foundations. It's gone. They

(35:37):
tore down the most expensive clean coalpower plant in the nation. So then
we weren't getting the flyash to blendto the concrete products. So then we
had to start using more Portland cementbecause we didn't have that additive, that
flyash additive anymore. And so therewas that That was a couple of years
ago. Well. Also Biden passedoff some rules where he wants to improve

(35:57):
the environmentally environmental enliness of kilns,and kilns are the vessels that essentially take
the limestone and convert it into Portlandcement. Portland cement is the gray powder.
It's the glue that makes concrete.So you take the gray powder,
you mix it with some sand,some rock, and some water. You

(36:19):
mix it up and that turns intoconcrete when it hardens. So what we're
lacking right now is the glue.The kilns are all having to be updated
to be environmentally friendly nationwide, sothat's causing a problem. We're living off
stockpiles that we have left, andwe're being allocated those stockpiles. And oddly
enough, Cemex, who produces youknow, some of the largest stockpiles of
Portland cement on the planet, andthey produce it in Hermoseo, Mexico and

(36:44):
other parts of Mexico and other partsof South America. For whatever reason,
they're not importing as much as theynormally do. And I'm pretty sure the
EPA regulations here don't apply to theirto their kilns over in Mexico. But
for whatever reason, we're just notgetting the quantities we were before. And
then in addition to that, wegot caught flat footed. China bought off

(37:04):
all the microchips nation worldwide during thepandemic, and now we have a microchip
shortage, so we got caught flatfootage. Now Intel's building a big plant
out in Channel, Arizona, andthen we have TCM, which is the
Taiwan Semiconductor or TSM Taiwan Semiconductor manufacturers. They're building one out in North Phoenix,
a wayfer manufacturer for computer chips.And those projects are sucking up about

(37:30):
thirteen thousand cubic yards of concrete aday, and unfortunately that's taken away from
the housing industry. So now homebuilders that were say getting two thousand yards
a week are only getting five hundreda week. Home Builders that we're getting
five hundred yards a week are onlygetting fifty yards a week. Everybody's being
allocated across the board, including myself, and as a result, all of

(37:51):
our businesses, A big chunk hasbeen carved out of everybody, and that
chunk is in the amount of upseventy percent of a carve out of everybody's
company. So everybody's gonna have toshrink, not by choice and not because
there's not workout there. We havetons of work in Arizona, but we
don't have the cement to keep up. Roofers cannot buy roofing tiles because there's
no cement to make the roofing tiles. Landscapers are having a hard time buying

(38:15):
pavers because there's not cement to makethe pavers. Masons that buy block,
they're having a hard time buying blockbecause the masons need, you know,
because Portland cement is necessary to makethe block. And so now the masons
have been allocated on the amount ofblock they can buy a day or a
week. And so essentially, allacross the board, all sexes, all

(38:37):
sectors of construction are bringing our constructionindustry in Arizona almost to a darn screech
and hoole because of lack of materials. And I'm hearing there's going to be
fuel shortages in the next month orso, and I'm hearing by the end
of the year we're gonna have foodshortages. So these are all repercussions of
the planned dimmick that they planned,and fortunately we're suffering those repercussions now in

(39:05):
the busier sit in the busier stateslike Texas in Arizona were suffering the most.
And maybe and maybe like Utah orsomething like that. Most of the
Democrats states are slow anyway, soit doesn't really matter. It's not affecting
them as badly as it's affecting usin the red states that are actually booming.
I'm not sure how it's affecting Ronde Santis, But I'll tell you
what, when I'm governor of Arizona, I'm going to be much more powerful

(39:28):
than Ron de Santis. I amgoing to go fight for the people,
and I am going to nullify lawsthat come down from the federal government,
including laws that the EPAS trying toimpose on these kilns here in Arizona.
In Clarkdale and in Rialito where theyproduce Portland cement. I'm gonna say,
guys, I'm nullifying those those regulationscoming down from the EPA or those federal

(39:52):
laws coming down, I'm nullifying those. We're not recognizing those laws. Guys.
Go back to work, go backto producing. We need to get
back to building well stated. Amen. Amen, that's what Arizona needs.
Arizona needs a working governor, aperson who works every day, who understands
the challenges of the people, andwho works hard every day. It's sad

(40:17):
that we have elitist in the GOPleadership in your state house, and like
these people think that they're above everyoneelse and they don't represent people. And
I'm glad you're fighting back, Yeah, because they've been doing this for a
long time and they've been getting ourcountry for five decades and it's finally catching

(40:40):
up to us, and it's catchingup to us. And our inner cities
are completely gutted. There's homeless everywhere. There's people walking around looking like there's
zombies on fitnal and heroin and youname it, math, ben fhetamines and
whatnot. And it's sad. It'ssad. I've seen it with my own

(41:00):
eyes. I've talk to these people. It's so sad and something needs to
be done about it. I'm willingto step up and be the guy to
do something about it. I'm willingto stop the flow of drugs into my
state. I'm willing to go tothe homeless. I'm willing to help reform
them. I'm willing to help getthem off of drugs. I'm willing to

(41:22):
help get them into a trade school. I'm willing to get them shelter while
they're going to a trade school,and then when they complete their trade school,
they will go into the workforce andprovide for themselves in a way they've
never been able to provide for themselvesever before. They'll go into the workforce
with the life skills that I wantto train them, and with a real

(41:42):
skill that they can use their handsto produce something that's going to benefit the
people of Arizona. Absolutely, Scott, we have enough time to talk about
maybe one more issue, and Iwould like for you to talk about the
election integrity. Absolutely. Yeah.It kind of ties to my lawsuit a

(42:07):
little bit. Kelly Ward has beenflying all over the United United States with
Wendy Rogers fundraising about election integrity foralmost two years. She's been grifting across
the United States, grifting for money, talking about election integrity, but she
herself has no integrity. And youhave no room, Kelly Ward, to

(42:30):
talk about election integrity when you yourself, as our azy GOP chair, lack
in integrity. You are not standingbehind the law that we are trying to
get passed here, among others.There's about six laws that they're trying to
get passed here, and one waswritten by John Fillmore and it's called HB

(42:52):
twenty two eighty nine, and thatis one vote on one day in person
on paper, no ballot drop boxes. And yes you can request a mail
ballot, but you have to behandicapped or you have to be in the
military to do that. And you'regoing to have to take your mail ballot
and you're going to have to handdeliver it to the voter center, not
to a ballot drop box. You'regoing to hand deliver it to the voter

(43:15):
center with a signature so we cancross check it and make sure it's legitimate.
We are not going to have electionsstolen any longer. We're not going
to watch movies about two thousand mules. If we're not going to do anything
about it, we need to actuallyget it past in the Arizona State legislators
so it can be the model legislationfor the rest of the United States to
follow, so that we can trulyonce and for all fix our elections,

(43:39):
make them real again, and thenactually get people like myself elected to an
office because the way they've got itset up. And my guess is why
the Republicans and Democrats want no partof HB twenty to eighty nine is because
then they can't cheat on either side. And from what I can tell based

(44:00):
on what I've been going through inthis primary, all they do is cheat
on every side. Republican, Democrat, you name it. They cheat.
They select, They don't elect,They select the candidates they want to be
in positions of power. They don'thelp you to get elected. They select

(44:22):
you, and then they put youin there. And I'm not putting up
with it anymore. I'm going toexpose what's been going on in Arizona elections,
and I'm sure the same thing's goingon across the country. And this
is what happens when you have multibilliondollar companies controlling the country, multinational corporations

(44:45):
controlling the United States and its interests, and their lobbyists controlling the United States
and its interests. Elections today arenot as fair as they were a hundred
years ago, but we need tomake them that way again, and we
can with the right legislation and withpeople with a spine and a backbone willing
to talk about it and willing tofight for it, because if we don't

(45:07):
fight for it through voting, thesad thing is we end up in the
future fighting for it in another way. And I don't want to go the
other direction. I want to fightfor it through voting. Not absolutely absolutely,
We're going to take a quick commercialbreak and we'll be back with closing
only Marks Scott Neely, candidate forGovernor of Arizona. Another important issue facing

(45:37):
Arizona is election integrity, and regardlessof how you feel about past elections,
we must move forward with legislation thatensures that our voting system is safe and
fair because that's the only way wecan restore the Arizona Republic. Vote nearly
for governor in the August second primaryelection, paid for by Neely for Arizona

(46:02):
Welcome back to the Chauncey Show.We're always right and never left. We
put God first in politics. Second, I'm your patriot, host Chauncey Brown.
We're honored, proud, and blessDavin the studio. I call them
the Workingman's Governor. Mister Scott Neely, who's a candidate for governor of Arizona.

(46:22):
Scott, would you please share someclosing remarks with us, and then
please share with my listeners your websiteif they like to donate or help out
volunteer. Yeah, absolutely, I'dlove to have volunteers and door knockers.
I need to get some more ofthose working for me. I'd like you
to visit my website that's Neely forGovernor dot com that is in E E

(46:45):
L Y F O R governor dotcom, and please donate. Join in
the fight because this is a thisis a steep, uphill battle that I'm
time in right now, and I'mgonna need all the help I can get,
and I appreciate all the help Ican get, and I appreciate all
the help that I've been given tothis point. I feel blessed to be

(47:06):
in the position that I'm in tobe a voice for the people and be
a voice for the fight to savethe United States of America and to put
Arizona first and save the Arizona Republic. Amen, thank you so much Scott
for taking time out of your busyschedule to come on my podcast. We're
going to keep you in your familyand prayers as you keep on fighting for

(47:32):
the working people. Thank you somuch. God bless you, Chauncey and
everything that you're doing for the Americanpeople too, because what you're doing is
so important. It's so so veryimportant, and I very much appreciate it.
Thank you very much. Hopefully you'llhave time to come back on before

(47:52):
the primary in August. I thinkI should make I will make time to
come on for the primary in August, fair enough. I know that you're
very very busy, and we appreciateyou're taking the time to come and speak
to the American people. God blessyou and your family. Thank you so

(48:12):
much for your kind words, andwe will continue to fight together. Thank
you so much. God, Godbless you. For those that are tuning
in listening to the Chauncey Show,We're always right and never left. We
had the working Man's candidate for Governorof Arizona, Scott Neely not only talking

(48:36):
about the challenges of being a candidateand what he has gone through from the
pushback of elite us within the GOPParty because he stands for what is right
and not what is popular. Ithas caused him to file a lawsuit to
call these people on the carpet.These are the type of candidates that we

(48:57):
need an office today, Not onesthat are going to go along and get
along, but one that are goingto call out wrongdoing, the legal acts
and corruption. This is the onlyway we're going to fix a broken system.
If you don't stand up for something, you'll fall for anything. And

(49:17):
we all have a responsibility to standup and be accounted for for our actions.
So everybody in Arizona, across thecountry, the time is at hand.
If you love America, if youlove your freedom, if you love
liberty, and wherever you are inthe corner of the country, stand up

(49:39):
for what is right because at theend of the day, we're all going
to be judged by God and thenyou're He's going to look back at your
life and say, well, whatdid you do? Did you stand up
for what was right? We area critical moment in our history in this

(50:00):
country where the truth becomes conspiracy andlies are the truth. We all have
a responsibility to stand up and pushback against this nonsense of the left trying
to groom our children with pedophilia,with victimization victimhood. And I want to

(50:30):
thank all of those parents that stoodup and had the courage to stand up
and push back against all of thoseschool boards in the Department of Justice ship
be ashamed of themselves calling parents domesticterrorists when the last time I remember,

(50:50):
parents are in charge of the educationof their children, not school boards.
So even if it's local, state, or national, we all have a
responsibility. Then the time is athand that we all stand up, because
if we don't all stand up,then we have nobody to blame ourselves for

(51:10):
what is happening. I want tothank everybody for tuning into The Chauncey Show
today. We're here every Tuesday andThursday from six to seven pm Eastern Standard
Time, and if you give mea second, I'll let you know who's
up on the show next. Nextup on the twenty third to Thursday,

(51:34):
we're going to have Ryan Catilla,who's running for Congress in Texas this twelfth
district. We're going to have Brianin the studio, so that's going to
be in an exciting show. We'regoing to be talking about the border,
which is unbelievable. The border crisis, the ft in all crisis. Texas
is at the hub of all ofthis illegal stuff that's going on. I

(52:00):
think there's twelve to fifteen thousand peopleright now waiting at the border to get
in this nonsences to stop people,you know, and like Scott said earlier,
we all have a vote. Wemust exercise that vote and we must
talk to other people to do theright thing. I want to thank everybody

(52:24):
for tuning into the Chauncey Show andwe're going to be here on Thursday,
and I hope everybody has a blessedweek in a safe evening until next time.
God bless you all and thank youfor tuning in. Good night now and
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