Droopy wrote:He is the grandson of late Apostle and member of the First Presidency, Hugh B. Brown. (A known "liberal")
Brown was a Democrat of a completely different generation. Whether or not he was a "liberal" in the modern sense, you will have to demonstrate.
A liberal in the 1960s isn't the same as a liberal in 2008. Liberalism has evolved. Someone in 1960 would have had a different opinion of what is liberal.
Brown was dropped from the First Presidency by JFS because of his views. He was also a very forward thinking Mormon. For example, from his memoirs:
It is a dangerous thing to try to regulate the private lives of husbands and wives or for church leaders to go into the bedroom of a couple who are married and try to dictate what they should or should not do. Many of the problems people bring to the authorities of the chuch should be settled by the persons themselves. They know the basic rule of right and wrong. For example, there are cases where abortion is absolutely justified, in fact necessary, such as in the case of forcible rape, the threat of permanent injury to the mother's health or life, or the possibility of a grossly deformed birth. . . . And while we have not taken the unyielding attitude of some other churches toward artificial birth control, we cannot officially endorse it because too many young people would stop having children. Even so, I think we will one day have to modify our position. (119-20)
This advice was ignored, yet recall what happened in 1982 with the FP advice to members about oral sex. The backlash was quite strong, yet Brown advised against this long before it happened.
I wasn't suggesting only political liberalism. From one review of the memoirs:
In a life spanning more than 90 years, the Canadian born apostle in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was not always in harmony with his fellow man, nor with his associates in the quorum, on temporal matters. However, according to his grandson, he was always striving to be in harmony with his God, and in spite of conflicts born of his strong convictions, he firmly believed in keeping a careful balance. He was a loyal Democrat all his life, and strongly supported the two party system.
Hugh B. Brown was first of all a strong advocate of freedom. Yet, he cautioned all to beware of extremism. He was liberal in his views of many social questions, yet refrained from revolutionary impulses. He schooled himself to accept things that could not be changed, but never reconciled to the idea that they might never change.