Some people do not seem to understand that this really is about the abuse of power. It is not about mutual sexual attraction but about one person having power over another.
Employees - male or female - may be many layers down in the management structure from the person who makes improper remarks, behaves improperly or sexually assaults them. Making an official complaint, with no corroborative evidence or the backing of others who have been treated similarly, may well lead to the complainant being, in effect, "blacklisted".
In a very different scenario, building workers who raised concerns to their employers about health and safety issues were put on a blacklist and some of them could never again get work in the industry. Blacklisting had been suspected for several years but it wasn't until the actual list was discovered following a raid that these suspicions were finally confirmed, leading to the workers affected receiving substantial compensation.
Sexual harassment or assault is, of course, completely different but when it involves those with immediate or ultimate authority over hiring and firing intimidating and exploiting workers - be they people working on building sites or in the media - the issue is, in my view, about the misuse of power.
Grannyactivist's account of her truly horrible experience in a solicitor's office, at the instigation of someone she says is now a judge, is a good example of how some powerful people use that power to demean and belittle others. I wonder if the secretaries who were present came to think this sort of behaviour was acceptable or whether they went along with it because they too were relatively powerless.