According to Spahiu, Azem Vlasi was a farmer, Ibrahim Rugova bar, and Hashim Thaci is a club

Political analyst Nedmedin Spahiu, in a publication on the social network “Facebook” has written that Azem Vlasi, Ibrahim Rugova and Hashim Thaci are the three personalities who have scored the last four decades in Kosovo, Periscope reports. Spahiu writes that these three possess dominant philosophies in Kosovo. For Vlase, he says he has led [...]
Spahiu writes that these three possess dominant philosophies in Kosovo. For Vlase, he says he has led Kosovo into the farmer's philosophy. For Rugova, he says he had shepherd philosophy, while Thaci writes he is leading Kosovo with the philosophy of cubi.
Spahiu, taking the philosophies of these three personalities, writes that it is not surprising that they dominated the country when the dominant professions of Albanians are cubery, livestock, and agriculture.
Read his full reaction:
The three personalities that marked the last four decades in Kosovo are Azem Vlasai, Ibrahim Rugova, and Hashim Thaci. All three possess dominant philosophies in Kosovo.
Azem Vlasai has led Kosovo with the farmer's philosophy. (His father also noticed this earlier and did not want to let him go to school until he saw that he was an exemplary student who thought he was good for the farmer.) Azem has had the patience to expect political processes to ripen, to produce their fruit so he can harvest them. In fact, the main political fruitage was eaten by yellow Milosevic, who later had his teeth numb.
Ibrahim Rugova had shepherd philosophy. For the shepherd, time does not matter, for him it's important to keep the gray. And Rugova, at the time of the Balkan massacre, managed to guard the grey woman (the Kosovo people) with minimal casualties against the dreadful danger.
Hashim Thaci leads Kosovo with Cubi philosophy. He plants nothing (as he planted Vlasi) and does not preserve anything (as Rugova watched), it simply absorbs ready fruits.
When man thinks about it, he sees that the three dominant professions of Albanians are the guide, livestock and agriculture, then it is not surprising that these philosophies dominated Kosovo in the last four decades./Periscopi









