Anti-suffragists used many arguments supporting their view; some said most women did not want to vote and only few would use it, some thought that women were physically unfit for direct competition with men and were not able to give the force that the government needs. Others argued that women were perfectly safe in the hands of men and would be corrupted by politics. Some Anti-Suffragists also believed that women would abandon their domestic duties when given the right to vote. In 1871, the Anti-Suffrage Association was founded. In 1911, the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage was founded by Mrs. Arthur Dodge which included wealthy, influential women, southern congressmen and corporate capitalists.