I'm afraid I don't understand your question. Can you clarify?
I'm going to assume it's a reference to my comment about corporate offices and Prop 13. The measure I referred to is one that will end Prop 13 protections on corporate offices. As a result, real flesh people will continue to benefit from Prop 13 and non-people people will not.
As for the way it normally goes, both real flesh people and non-people people generally pay taxes on the value of their real property. Which strikes me as, on the whole, reasonably fair and equitable. California has decided that nobody should have to, provided they've had that real property long enough. The change going to voters would leave real flesh people exempt(-ish).
On the one hand, having corporations pay actual taxes will help state and local governments uncouple their budgets from the stock market some. On the other hand, there's already a problem where cities are incentivized to permit offices over housing, and this seems likely to make that worse...