I have something to say which I think would add to the intellectual discussion. Should MIT host my comments?
In any case, there's no need to reach towards Nazis - plenty of people protested when the war criminal Kissinger wanted to teach at Columbia. See https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=19771108&id=... for example, where he made it in to Georgetown but mention that 135 faculty and 1,000 students at Columbia "registered their disapproval and Mr. Kissinger withdrew from the negotiations."
> I have something to say which I think would add to the intellectual discussion. Should MIT host my comments?
It doesn't matter whether you think you would add to the intellectual discussion, it matter whether MIT think so.
> In any case, there's no need to reach towards Nazis
Agreed. There are many real life cases. There are lots of things that go into who you should hire as a professor (which is obviously distinct from who you should host for a discussion), but there mere fact that a bunch of people registered their disapproval doesn't much speak to them.
In any case, there's no need to reach towards Nazis - plenty of people protested when the war criminal Kissinger wanted to teach at Columbia. See https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1350&dat=19771108&id=... for example, where he made it in to Georgetown but mention that 135 faculty and 1,000 students at Columbia "registered their disapproval and Mr. Kissinger withdrew from the negotiations."