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@alipsaurus

sat set bat bet

Katılım Ağustos 2010
661 Takip Edilen523 Takipçiler
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warga
warga@alipsaurus·
kaga jelas lu anjeng.
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njud
njud@wortelnim·
Kita lg menyaksikan sejarah (proyek korup sistematis paling besar di sejarah Indonesia) Ak ingat dulu pas korupsi e-ktp yg 2 triliun. It truly feels VERY big and massive. Tapi sekarang? 1,5 hari MBG 😂
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Alnick
Alnick@alnickmnathan·
Zero sympathy for balinese people who make building dense urban housing illegal for cultural reasons but then have the gall to complain about housing crisis & urban sprawling only to blame it on non-balinese.
𝗕𝗔𝗟𝗜 ᬩᬮᬶ@anamazingbali

Di Bali, terdapat awig-awig (aturan tradisional) bahwa bangunan tidak boleh lebih tinggi dari pohon kelapa - sekitar 15 meter. Aturan ini kemudian diformalkan menjadi undang-undang melalui Peraturan Daerah Bali No. 16 Tahun 2009. Namun, apakah aturan ini masih diikuti?

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Siddharth
Siddharth@DearthOfSid·
No country in the world needs a regime change as much as the United States does.
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warga
warga@alipsaurus·
@kafinsulthan untung sempat lihat presentasinya di Perrotin kemarin 🙌🏾
warga tweet mediawarga tweet media
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kafin sulthan
kafin sulthan@kafinsulthan·
yuk bisa yuk museum macan bawain the dying worldnya lauren tsai ke sini
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H’s mom
H’s mom@aiishadahir·
It is a sin in Islam to think you are superior to anyone, and it is also a sin in Islam to think you are inferior to anyone. you've heard the first part often, don't ever forget the second part.
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liam cunningham
liam cunningham@liamcunningham1·
The horrors happening in Iran and Lebanon are happening because of what the world is allowing to happen in Gaza and the West Bank. The Zionists are emboldened by silence. Silence is tacit approval. SILENCE IS COMPLICITY.
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hywnnkw
hywnnkw@heywannaknoww·
“politik gak ngaruh di kehidupan gw” tunggu aja sampai kuburan lu, ibu lu, bapak lu, digusur demi kepentingan pembukaan lahan pembangunan dapur MBG atau koperasi desa merah putih.
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Pink Bourbon
Pink Bourbon@pinkbourbon8898·
They're right for Japan, Korea, and Singapore. Those guys source 75% of refined products from the Persian Gulf. Hormuz closes, they bleed. But Indonesia is a different story entirely. Yes, Indonesia imports refined products. Pertamina's refining capacity doesn't fully cover domestic demand, so Pertalite and Solar get bridged through imports. The Hormuz shock hits that. Real exposure. What makes Indonesia different is this. Indonesia's actual risk from this isn't supply. It's fiscal. If oil prices spike because Hormuz stays closed, the government's subsidy bill for Pertalite and Solar expands. Wider deficit, rupiah pressure. That's the bear case for Indonesia, and even that's manageable. The bull case is what nobody is talking about. Indonesia runs B40 right now. 40% of every liter of diesel consumed domestically is palm oil biodiesel, not petroleum. When oil spikes, the incentive to push toward B50 or B55 gets stronger overnight. Import volume drops. Indonesia self-hedges using its own CPO supply. No other country in Asia has this. Not Korea, not Japan, not Singapore. Then there's coal. When Hormuz disrupts LNG and oil flows into Asia, the fastest lever available to power generators in Japan, Korea, and India is gas to coal switching. Indonesia is the world's largest seaborne thermal coal exporter. ADARO, ITMG, PTBA, BUMI don't suffer from this scenario. Export volumes go up. Realized prices go up. Royalty revenue to the government goes up. Same logic on LNG. Indonesia exports from Bontang and Tangguh. When Middle Eastern supply gets disrupted, the spot premium on non Gulf LNG widens. Indonesian cargoes price up. Same logic on CPO. High oil equals strong biodiesel demand globally equals strong CPO prices. Indonesia and Malaysia control 85% of global supply. You see, Indonesia pays more for refined product imports. Fiscal subsidy pressure rises. Rupiah is a watch item. Those are real negatives. But Indonesia earns more on coal exports, earns more on LNG spot, earns more on CPO, and reduces net petroleum import volume through accelerated biodiesel blending. The terms of trade move in Indonesia's favor, not against it. The conventional take is "Indonesia is a net oil importer so oil shock is bad." The correct take is Indonesia is a net energy exporter in the commodities that directly substitute for disrupted Persian Gulf supply. A sustained Hormuz closure improves Indonesia's aggregate energy trade position, not deteriorates it. Happy Sunday and Happy Easter.
HFI Research@HFI_Research

Goldman on oil.

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Mado
Mado@madokafc1·
In short Indonesia actually living on their own bubble, have their own pace, unbothered and almost shielded from any global shock entirely. There is also trade off, Indonesia would always unable to catch high speed economy build up like most of East Asian industrial exporter countries like China, Japan and South Korea in the past which can easily gain 7 percent economic growth per year or more in case of China. Indonesia becoming the largest unseen country in the world is not for nothing apparently 😂😂
Pink Bourbon@pinkbourbon8898

They're right for Japan, Korea, and Singapore. Those guys source 75% of refined products from the Persian Gulf. Hormuz closes, they bleed. But Indonesia is a different story entirely. Yes, Indonesia imports refined products. Pertamina's refining capacity doesn't fully cover domestic demand, so Pertalite and Solar get bridged through imports. The Hormuz shock hits that. Real exposure. What makes Indonesia different is this. Indonesia's actual risk from this isn't supply. It's fiscal. If oil prices spike because Hormuz stays closed, the government's subsidy bill for Pertalite and Solar expands. Wider deficit, rupiah pressure. That's the bear case for Indonesia, and even that's manageable. The bull case is what nobody is talking about. Indonesia runs B40 right now. 40% of every liter of diesel consumed domestically is palm oil biodiesel, not petroleum. When oil spikes, the incentive to push toward B50 or B55 gets stronger overnight. Import volume drops. Indonesia self-hedges using its own CPO supply. No other country in Asia has this. Not Korea, not Japan, not Singapore. Then there's coal. When Hormuz disrupts LNG and oil flows into Asia, the fastest lever available to power generators in Japan, Korea, and India is gas to coal switching. Indonesia is the world's largest seaborne thermal coal exporter. ADARO, ITMG, PTBA, BUMI don't suffer from this scenario. Export volumes go up. Realized prices go up. Royalty revenue to the government goes up. Same logic on LNG. Indonesia exports from Bontang and Tangguh. When Middle Eastern supply gets disrupted, the spot premium on non Gulf LNG widens. Indonesian cargoes price up. Same logic on CPO. High oil equals strong biodiesel demand globally equals strong CPO prices. Indonesia and Malaysia control 85% of global supply. You see, Indonesia pays more for refined product imports. Fiscal subsidy pressure rises. Rupiah is a watch item. Those are real negatives. But Indonesia earns more on coal exports, earns more on LNG spot, earns more on CPO, and reduces net petroleum import volume through accelerated biodiesel blending. The terms of trade move in Indonesia's favor, not against it. The conventional take is "Indonesia is a net oil importer so oil shock is bad." The correct take is Indonesia is a net energy exporter in the commodities that directly substitute for disrupted Persian Gulf supply. A sustained Hormuz closure improves Indonesia's aggregate energy trade position, not deteriorates it. Happy Sunday and Happy Easter.

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sarah
sarah@sahouraxo·
Israel killed 3 Indonesian UN peacekeepers in South Lebanon. They were wearing blue helmets. They were in UN uniforms. They were peacekeepers. Israel bombed them anyway. Not a peep in Western media. Not a word from the international community. Kick Israel out of the UN.
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Blank cannot name
Blank cannot name@pecelkucing·
@kompascom Silahkan segel 41 rb 958 ponpes tersebut😁😁🤭
Blank cannot name tweet media
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Creapills 💊
Creapills 💊@creapills·
"STOP WAR" Typographie par Barbara Galińska
Creapills 💊 tweet media
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Middle East Monitor
Middle East Monitor@MiddleEastMnt·
"Three Indonesian soldiers were killed in southern Lebanon in less than 48 hours. They were not fighters. They were part of a United Nations peacekeeping mission (UNIFIL). They were stationed in known positions. And still, they died. This is not a tragic accident. It is a clear signal. The sequence of events matters. On 29th March, a projectile struck a UN position near Adchit al-Qusayr, killing one Indonesian peacekeeper and critically injuring another. Hours later, a second incident—an explosion that destroyed a UN vehicle near Bani Hayyan—killed two more. Three dead. In uniform. Under a UN flag. The Israeli military says it is “reviewing” what happened and emphasises that these deaths occurred in an “active combat zone.” But that explanation is not convincing. UNIFIL positions are fixed, mapped, and communicated to all parties. Peacekeepers are not hidden actors. They are the most visible neutral presence in any conflict zone. If they are being hit, it is not because they cannot be seen. It is because they are being disregarded. That distinction matters. Because it speaks directly to intent. Since early March, Israel has expanded its military campaign in Lebanon, pushing deeper into the south and openly pursuing a buffer zone up to the Litani River. This is not a limited operation. It is a widening one. It has already killed more than 1,200 people in Lebanon and displaced many more. Peacekeepers are now operating inside a battlefield that is expanding by design. And this is the point: states that are preparing for peace do not expand war zones. They do not normalize strikes in areas populated by international forces. They do not repeatedly hit locations that are clearly marked as neutral. Israel’s conduct in Lebanon is not consistent with a state seeking de-escalation. It is consistent with one prioritizing military objectives over diplomatic constraints." #Opinion by Dr. Muhammad Zulfikar Rakhmat middleeastmonitor.com/20260401-the-k…
Middle East Monitor tweet media
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nanas
nanas@sophrosyln·
kerja kreatif dibilang hobi, freelance dibilang ga stabil. tapi semua total pendapatan wajib lapor spt hahahahahahahahahahahahaa negara lucu
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Weather Monitor
Weather Monitor@WeatherMonitors·
Indonesia is on track to become the world champion of tropical deforestation. Under the Prabowo administration, over 433,000 hectares were cleared in 2025, nearly double the previous year. Driven by mining and palm oil, the loss equals six times the size of Singapore.
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Iran Embassy in Indonesia
Iran Embassy in Indonesia@IraninIndonesia·
The Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran expresses its deepest condolences to the Government and people of Indonesia on the tragic loss of an Indonesian peacekeeper serving under UNIFIL. We strongly condemn this heinous act, which is a direct consequence of Israel’s continued aggression, carried out with the complicity and full support of the USA. Targeting peacekeepers is a grave violation of international_law and must not go unpunished.
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