Burden of Guilt
Where Pacifism shuts a creature off entirely, this one-mana aura only bends it: the repeatable tap keeps both phases live rather than locking the threat down. Fire the activation on their turn before they declare attackers and an oversized creature sits at home; fire it on your own turn and a key blocker is pulled out of the way for your swing. The activation is the gate that does more than its size suggests, because it sets how often you can fire: a deep mana base neutralizes one threat every untap step while a tight one has to ration. That recurrence is the case for it over one-shot pump or fight spells, which spend a card to do their job once; this answers the lone large attacker white most wants to handle and comes back every turn. The cost of that design is where it lives. As an aura on an opposing creature, it reads as a clean one-for-one against enchantment removal, and if it is stripped the threat is simply free again to attack unhindered. White has printed variations on this template across many eras, trading words of flexibility for a slightly cheaper rate; this sits at the inexpensive, no-frills end of that line, swapping the permanence of a true shutdown for a tap that never asks for a fresh card.

