Duggars Turn On Pervert Brother In TV Special

Jessa duggar square

Even the Duggar family is finally disgusted enough with twisted child molester Josh to turn on him in the TLC special “Jill & Jessa: Counting On” for sexually abusing their young sisters and a family friend — oh, and for cheating on his wife, Anna.

The Duggar clan’s original hit TV series, “19 Kids and Counting” was canceled in July after the girls’ dirtbag brother, Josh, 27, admitted to molesting them — as well as others — starting when he was 14 years old. The opening installment of the three-part series is meant to try to get the Duggar clan back on the reality TV gravy train — even if it means free publicity for the pervert.

“It is your older brother, someone you love and trust and so definitely there was a period of time in our family when Josh was not to be trusted,” said Jessa Duggar Seewald, 23, of the sexual molestation she endured around 2002.

“After that time, it was a really, really hard time on our family,” said Jill Duggar Dillard, 24. “[But] that was 12 years ago and the healing process started shortly after that happened. We have chosen — Jessa and I can say that — we have chosen to forgive Josh, and that is an important part of our own healing. If we do not forgive then we cannot move on.”

“(Josh) had worked hard to rebuild our trust in him and had become someone we could look up to,” Jessa added.

When the scandal broke this summer, old wounds were reopened — and Josh was finally forced to confront his disgusting past.

And then Josh was revealed to also be a poor excuse for a husband. When data files from the cheating website Ashley Madison were leaked to the public, Josh was routed as a member since 2013!

In August, Josh decided to check himself into what his family described as a “long-term treatment center”

Jill and Jessa do not want what their evil brother did to them to define them forever as “molestation victims.”

“We really had to work through it because, as a victim, you’ve already worked through that and dealt with it. And you don’t want it rubbed in your face all the time,” Jill said.

“Going forward, we will come out of this fire, so to speak, stronger as a family unit.”