Jakarta Indonesia, WartaGlobal. Id
 The title hits hard: THE SINS OF JOKOWI_. But don’t rush to judge. This newly released eBook is a political satire that forces readers to rethink: are Jokowi’s “sins” real, or is his real “sin” daring to make massive changes that were considered impossible for decades?

Written with sharp, blunt satire and packed with data, the book doesn’t take sides. The author unpacks accusations, criticism, controversies, and slams them against the achievements that still spark debate from coffee shops to seminar rooms.

Satire, Not Worship 
Using a satirical lens, the eBook pushes readers to drop the “fan” or “hater” glasses for a moment. The goal: see Jokowi’s political journey from an angle rarely covered by mainstream media.

4 big questions drive the book:

1. Why is infrastructure development so controversial? 
Sea toll, MRT, regional airports, IKN/Nusantara. Built fast, but criticism over debt + delayed public benefits is just as loud. The book breaks down the data, no PR gloss.

2. Is downstreaming a threat or Indonesia’s biggest opportunity? 
The ban on raw nickel exports triggered a WTO lawsuit from Europe. Domestically, smelters exploded and jobs flooded in. Environmental risk vs trillions in foreign exchange. Which one is the sin, which is the virtue?

3. Why is Jokowi still the most talked-about figure even after leaving office? 
From “I Love Jokowi” shirts to “Jokowi 3 terms” memes, his presence feels like it has no “off” button. The eBook analyzes why his political magnet refuses to fade.

4. What makes both supporters and critics unable to forget him?
Supporters chant “work-work”. Critics shout “yes-man politics”. Turns out both have data. That’s where the satire bites: it exposes flaws in our own logic.

Who Is This Book For?
If you’re on Team “Jokowi the infrastructure hero”, this book will make you rethink the price paid. If you’re on Team “Jokowi the political dynasty builder”, it’ll also make you admit real transformation happened in 10 years.

The word “Sins” is a rhetorical trap. In Indonesian politics, daring to change the system = risk of being called sinful. Staying in the comfort zone = seen as “holy”, even if nothing changes.

Editor’s Note
THE SINS OF JOKOWI_ eBook is available for download now. Perfect reading with coffee, for debate, or just to keep your political view from getting stuck in one echo chamber.

Because in the post-truth era, sharp satire is sometimes more honest than “neutral” but bland news.

Already read it? In your opinion, what’s Jokowi’s biggest “sin”: debt, IKN, downstreaming, or simply being “too human” for a president’s standards?