"Sexual harassment" itself was a relatively new concept. It was first described by Cornell University activists in about 1975, but it was about as widely known or accepted as "cisgendered" is now. It wasn't until 1991, when U.S. Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas was accused of sexual harassment by Anita Hill, that it got into mainstream consciousness.
So in 1994, it was literally JUST accepted that sexual harassment actually existed and was inappropriate when directed at women. (Remember that character riding the ferry who bemoaned "We used to have fun with the girls. Now she probably wants your job"). The idea that men could be sexually harassed to would be a whole new fight.
Hell, the laws of that time targeting domestic abuse, like the "Violence Against Women Act", were written to refer to women only because it was hard for the people framing those laws to imagine a man being the victim of domestic violence from a female perp.
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