Hello, Australia! – A disgusting scandal rocks reality TV’s biggest clan – Ireland is (possibly) poised to make marriage history – South Korea’s Nut Rage lady walks out of prison – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Reality TV star Josh Duggar of the “19 Kids and Counting” show has been forced to admit that he molested at least five underage girls when he was a teen – include a few of his own sisters.  In Touch magazine broke the story of suppressed police documents in Springdale, Arkansas showing that Josh was 15 when he confessed to his father Jim Bob Duggar, who waited a full year before contacting police.  Revealed as an incestuous molester, Josh Duggar immediately resigned his job at the ultra-conservative Family Research Council in Washington, DC, a group that fights against women’s reproductive rights and marriage equality.

The polls still look like Irish voters will approve Marriage Equality, making Ireland the first nation to legalize gay marriage by referendum.  We’ll see – polls have been wrong before, but some are showing a “Yes” vote winning by a two-to-one margin.  All of the big political parties support a “Yes” vote – The Catholic Church opposes the referendum, and the outcome could reflect on the Church’s influence in Irish society, which many believe is waning in the wake of the Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal.

The head of the Boy Scouts of America is warning social conservatives that the group’s ban on Gay adult leaders is “unsustainable”.  Robert Gates oversaw the integration of LGBT membership in the US military.  In his new role as BSA President, he told the group’s national meeting in Atlanta that “We must deal with the world as it is,” or face “the end of us as a national movement”.  Scouts Australia faces no such decision, because gay members and leaders aren’t banned.  Just America needs to face up to the passing of the 18th century.

Police suspect scavengers seeking scrap metal tore dozens of plaques from grave marker at the Frankston cemetery in Melbourne’s southeast.  Several were taken from the graves of war veterans.  Investigators the dirtbags will probably only get around $10 apiece for the plaques – but the families of the deceased are looking at shelling out $24,000 to repair the damage.

The Mayor of Taiji, Japan says the annual Dolphin will go on, even though the nation’s largest Zoo and Aquarium organization ordered members not to buy live animals from Taiji.  International pressure came on the group because of the savagery of the hunt, in which cetaceans are herded into shallow water where most are stabbed and speared to death.  Even though half of his business is now gone, Mayor Kazutaka Sangen says the hunt is legal, and therefore it will continue.

A South Korean court released former Korean Air “Nut Rage” executive Heather Cho from prison after three months of a two year sentence.  Cho attracted worldwide headlines for the tantrum she threw at New York’s JFK airport when a flight attendant served her macadamia nuts in a bag instead of in a dish.  Officially, the conviction was for violating plane safety laws because she ordered the taxiing plane back to the terminal to offload the flight attendant.  Cho comes from one of South Korea’s most powerful “chaebol” families, uber-wealthy elites who own the country’s biggest conglomerates and are accused of acting with impunity.