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How is it possible, you ask? Easy. You just have to (1) buy yourself a few legislators (Oregon is one of five states with no limits on corporate campaigning), (2) threaten municipal and state gov't to relocate your factories/warehouses/corporate HQs unless you get a big tax break (because GATT and NAFTA are your friends), and (3) wave a few low-cost carrots for the locals to convince them that you're really a bunch of kind-hearted community-minded corporate citizens who share the same interests as the people you employ. It works really well.
Can it be reversed? Maybe, in time. Understand, please, that large corporations think nothing of outspending any grassroots or union efforts at containment, taxation, or re-regulation by orders of magnitude in Oregon. The first steps in the other direction are campaign finance reform. Without something sturdy along those lines in place, corporations can and will continue to deliver the shaft to a willing well-carrotted population, while telling voters the stick they feel is from the burdensome "socialist" bureacracy of state and local government.
This is not to say that lack of corporate taxes alone have spelled Oregon's demise. Strangely enough, Oregon's decaying infrastructure and inadequate tax base can be tied primarily to the efforts of one man: Bill Sizemore. Look up the history of him and "Oregon Taxpayers United", his lobbying/activist group, and you will see the background of our current funding fiasco writ large. Measure 5 (1990) and Measure 47 (1996) have done huge damage to government income, and consequently the ability of the government to fund various programs at reasonable levels.
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