Haazda Exonerator
White has always paid for its enchantment removal in flexibility rather than mana, and this design sits at the narrow end of that spectrum: a body that exists to be spent, with a single sacrifice converting it into the destruction of one Aura. Disenchant answers any enchantment for two mana and waits in your hand until you need it; this asks you to commit a 1/1 to the board a turn early, tap it, and give it up for an effect that touches only Auras. The trade is a creature for an enchantment, rarely a profile a deck wants. What the narrowness buys is presence: the body sits on the battlefield daring an opponent to commit an Aura into a known answer, and a Cleric still pulls weight in a shell that wants warm cleric bodies regardless. The tap is the genuine cost, since it can be summoning-sick the turn you most want the answer. Worth being precise about the timing: declaring it as a blocker does not tap it, so you can block, then during the declare blockers step before damage sacrifice it to blow up an Aura. It belongs to the lineage of disposable utility creatures that fold a reactive spell into a permanent: pay for the body up front, cash it in later, and accept a worse rate than the instant in exchange for a board presence you might never have to spend.
