Whore

The distinctions between a whore and a prostitute are minuscule.  Both receive personal gain: a prostitute for unworthy purpose; a whore compromises their principles.  The terms are not synonymous because they have different required elements, therefore a person can be any one, or a combination of some, or all; whore, prostitute, adulterer, or fornicator.  None of which require any overt or covert sexual conduct or behavior.

Whoredom: To pay for, sell, or pander a transaction that compromises the person’s principles for personal gain.

If the activity or service being paid for or sold compromises that person’s principles, it is whoredom; whoring is not limited to a sexual act.  A person who takes payment (in any form, including trade) for doing or saying something that compromises his/her principles qualifies them as a whore.

The selling or buying of the sexual benefits intended for marriage and customary between a husband and his wife, or the hire of a person for the sexual benefits of marriage outside of marriage, may constitute whoredom; but only if the transaction compromises the participants personal principles.

A whore is selling, a whore-monger is paying, and a pimp panders the transaction; whoredom includes all of the participants as an all-inclusive category, but only if the transaction compromises the participants personal principles. 

The required three elements of whoredom are

  1. The lack of continued commitment or permanency, and
  2. The compromising of personal principles, and
  3. Personal gain 

You cannot invoke your principles on the people selling themselves and label it as whoredom.  In order to constitute whoredom, it must compromise their personal principles in exchange for their personal gain, and without permanency.

Religion wrongly defines this word by limiting it to sexual activity. While in practice, they excuse themselves of their whoredom by invoking their wrong definition.

See also Prostitute

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