Absolutely! Think of satire as *humor with a mission*. It?? not just about being funny??t?? using irony, exaggeration, parody, or ridicule to expose and criticize people?? stupidity, vices, or societal flaws??specially in politics, culture, or human behavior??ith the hope of prompting reflection or change. What sets it apart from plain sarcasm or mockery is its *purpose*: satire aims to illuminate truth through distortion, not just insult. For example, Jonathan Swift?? 'A Modest Proposal' suggests eating babies to solve poverty?? shocking, absurd idea that forces readers to confront real injustices. Sarcasm might say, 'Oh, great job missing the deadline!' (targeting an individual), but satire would create a fake infomercial for 'Productivity Pills' that magically fix burnout??hile subtly critiquing toxic workplace culture. Key ingredients: wit + criticism + intentionality + a layer of plausible exaggeration. It?? humor wearing a thinking cap??nd sometimes, a protest sign.