@zou+1rKyD9Wd
The person who typed this is a principal with a target on her back.
Until relatively recently, "Principal" has been a normal career progression promotion for many people. There's been a lot of historical revisionism at SAS over the past few years, as HR figured out how to deny promotions to people who otherwise deserved them and which would have been routine in the past, but most managers saw Principal as the highest "normal" career level, and Distinguished as the only prestige level.
As I said, that all changed when HR decided to cut salaries for long-term employees as a way to reduce expenses. HR invented a few new prestige levels which are similarly unattainable, but tried to make a case that management should review their principals to determine if they're really working at the level of a principal. Can they really independently work on complex projects, lead small teams, all the things? The answer is that most of them cannot, and have never had to do any of that. As I said, Principal was seen by many managers as a normal career progression promotion, so just what you promoted people to when they had been at SAS long enough and couldn't get a raise without being promoted. It was never clear what managers were supposed to do about that, but over the past several years we were encouraged to be honest in our assessment, and feed that to HR.
That became the basis for some of the layoffs we've seen recently. IIRC all of the employees laid off in August were Principals. Most of the remaining Principals are either terrified they're on the list or afraid to rock the boat for fear their manager will decide they're not really working at the level of a Principal either, unless they're protected.
So that's where the "Have you picked apart those peoples careers and decided they aren’t worthy" question comes from. Of course, "they" aren't. Most of the Principals at SAS would never have been promoted to Principal under the current HR "guidelines". And there's no need to get upset about it. It's just the way it was when SAS was the only game in town and sitting on fat bags of cash from licenses and renewals at the end of every year. But it's not that way now. And recent HR actions have been driven by the way things are now.