A prominent black conservative has been banned from MAGA social media site Gettr for using the N-word in his profile after the app promoted itself as a 'cancel-free zone.' Jon Miller, a black right-wing pundit and former Blaze TV host, was forced to take to rival site Twitter to expose the 'free speech frauds' at Gettr after his account was suspended. He claimed that he was booted for 'no reason' and didn't create any posts using the slur, though admitted he used the N-word as part of his profile. 'Guess I was too critical of them for suspending others? What does it say when the 1st platform to ban me is the one that sells itself as the free speech alternative?' Miller tweeted with a photo showing the notice of his suspension. Gettr's global communications director Ebony Bowden quickly fired back on Twitter, accusing him of using the racial slur on the site. 'You are a liar @MillerStream. You did use our platform, and you included the N-word in your profile, a clear violation of our terms of service. GETTR does defend free speech but we've got no room for racial slurs. Bye,' tweeted Bowden, who is white. Miller replied to Bowden: 'Wow a black man can’t even refer to his own people freely if it makes a patronizing white woman mad! We ADOPTED that word as a term of ENDEARMENT because of racist Democrats (slave owners) like you.' Miller did not respond to an inquiry from DailyMail.com on Wednesday. Jon Miller, a black right-wing pundit and former Blaze TV host, has been banned from Gettr for using the N-word in his bio Gettr was launched by a former Trump aide and brands itself as standing against 'political censorship and "cancel culture"' People quickly began commenting on the situation and exchange between Miller and Bowden on Twitter. 'Imagine being the "Communications Director" for GETTR and telling a black man he can't say "n*gga" and then when he has a problem with his suspension, calling him a liar and ending with, "Bye". Lmao,' @MissusMassacre tweeted. '“GETTR supports free speech” as long as it doesn’t oFfEnD anyone,' Simon Miller wrote before directing people to switch to Gab, another right-wing social media site. 'If GETTR wants to maintain credibility as an alternative social media platform, they should reinstate @MillerStream. Banning a black man for putting the N-word in his bio is pretty insane— you don’t even see that on Twitter. Very slippery slope!' conservative Ashley St. Clair commented Gettr's global communications director Ebony Bowden replied to Miller's tweet about his suspension calling him a 'liar' and explaining that his suspension was established because he had used the N-word in his bio 'Jon Miller was banned on GETTR. Didn’t take long for GETTR’s owners to out themselves. You’re either for free speech or you aren’t. Even “offensive” speech should be protected,' right-wing commentator Millie Weaver tweeted. Some users even noted the irony of the conversation about Gettr taking place on Twitter - after Donald Trump crony Jason Milled launched the conservative site last year following his boss being banned from social media. 'GETTR reps arguing with users on twitter about why they were banned on GETTR is peak hilarity. We're never getting a viable twitter alternative,' @TheQuartering tweeted. Trump was banned for most main stream social media sites after the deadly January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, when his supporters attacked police and stormed Congress. His bans stoked criticism of liberal-leaning tech companies willingness to crack down on high-profile right wing users. Critics say the firms wield too much power, and are warping free speech. When the app first launched, it claimed that users would not censor a user's free speech unless they were talking negatively about the app itself. It brands itself as a social media site fighting against 'political censorship and "cancel culture."' Jason Miller said that the name is a combination of the words, 'Get Together.' 'Let's get together, we're talking about a sense of community. We think it will ultimately be a global platform—not just conservatives in the U.S. We want people from all political stripes to join the platform,' he told Fox News in an interview. 'This ties in with Independence Day. Independent from social media monopolies, independent from cancel culture; embracing free speech—our launch on Sunday is very much intentional. We believe there needs to be a new social media platform that really defends free speech, and one that doesn't de-platform for political beliefs. This is a challenge to social media monopolies.' But since its launch on July 4, the social media platform has begun to ban users for other infractions. Some have even accused the right-wing app of being more restrictive than Twitter, which does not prohibit the N-word. A former senior advisor for former president Donald Trump launched a social media app called Gettr in response to mainstream social media sites banning users Trump's former senior advisor Jason Miller created the app, which officially launched on July 4 Popular conservative commentator Joe Rogan also criticized Gettr, calling it 'not real' after he gained 9 million followers despite the social media app having less than 9 million users. He claims that Gettr simply combined his large Twitter following to his much smaller Gettr following. 'This is where the f**kery is,' Rogan continued. 'They take all my Twitter followers... and then they port those over.' The podcaster then said that he would get off the app but doesn't know how. While Gettr continues to be enmeshed in controversy, Trump announced plans to launch his new social media platform on February 21 - Presidents Day. The former president announced he was launching Trump Media Technology Group towards the end of last year, with plans for a subscription video-on-demand service called TMTG+ with entertainment, news and podcasts, as well as a social media platform. Few further details have been released until a possible launch date was spotted for Truth Social on the App Store. Tech writers said the platform looked very similar to Twitter, of which Trump was an avid user before being suspended. 'Truth Social looks very much like a Twitter clone, based on screenshots in the App Store listing,' said tech website The Verge. Former President Trump has been planning a new social media venture since being banned by Facebook and Twitter last year in the wake of the violent attack on the U.S. Capitol Truth Social is expected to launch on Feb. 21, Presidents Day, according to its listing on the Apple App Store. It is one part of a three-pronged media venture 'The profile page shown in one screenshot looks almost exactly like Twitter’s, and posts appear to have icons for replies, retweets, faves, and sharing.' TMTG is valued at $5.3 billion based on the stock price of Digital World Acquisition Corp - a so-called blank check company being used to take the Trump venture public - which rose 20% after details emerged of the app's listing. However, the plan faces regulatory risk. Democratic U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren asked Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler last month to investigate the planned merger for potential violations of securities laws around disclosure. She said public reporting suggested the blank-check company or SPAC was in talks with Trump's company before it went public - a possible breach of regulations. 'However, one press report indicates that Patrick Orlando, the SPAC’s sponsor, was discussing a deal with former President Trump as early as March 2021, months prior to the SPAC’s initial filing in May 2021 and public offering in September 2021,' she wrote in her complaint. 'These appeared to have been detailed discussions: at the March meeting, "[t]he investor presentation about the planned deal envisioned the combined company, which would offer a social media app, films, events and eventually a variety of technology services, being worth $15 billion and rivaling tech giants like Netflix and the cloud divisions of Amazon and Google."' The SEC has declined to comment on whether it plans any action. TMTG last month raised an additional $1 billion from private investors. Trump canceled a news conference at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida that had been scheduled for Jan. 6, marking the one-year anniversary of the Capitol attack. He said he will instead deliver remarks at a rally in Arizona on January 15. All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility