Having a different perspective is one thing, but breaking the law isn't a matter of personal choice.
Agreed. But going out, even travelling to a beach (in England), is not against the law.
If people want to go to the beach, then they should respect social distancing rules.
Agreed. But failing to comply with social distancing "rules" is not against the law.
They should use the public toilets (they were open in Bournemouth) not urinate and defecate on the beach and behind beach huts. But of course they have a different perspective on hygiene and decent behaviour and the rest of us should have empathy and understanding. A record number of parking fines were handed out for people parking illegally, but of course we must understand people must park somewhere and when the official car parks are full, they need to park across people's drives, restrict the highways, impede the emergency services, because that is their right and we must empathise with their difficulties.
Either you've misunderstood, or you are deliberately misconstruing my point. The activities you describe in this paragraph are illegal and/or unlawful and/or antisocial
at any time, the pre-existence of Covid has no bearing on their acceptability or otherwise.
In case it was unclear, my reference to "the situation" was in response to heywood's point about "asking people not to go out or meet up".
Criticising people for leaving their rubbish all over the beach is perfectly fair. Criticising people for sitting on the beach in a household group or 'bubble' and observing social distancing is unfair.
Some of the media coverage and comments about Bournemouth (for example) is tarring everyone with the same brush.
Everyone on the beach is being treated as an "idiot" or "stupid", regardless of what they individually or as groups are doing. The coverage - as has happened many times in recent months - appears to be exaggerated or blown out of proportion, and is conflating many different issues.
Three people were stabbed yesterday and needed hospital treatment (all from London according to Dorset police).
What is the relevance of them coming from London? Stabbing anyone, anytime, anywhere is illegal. Travelling from London to Dorset doesn't make it any more (or less) illegal.
A few weeks ago at Durdle Door beach, there were four injuries, mostly due to "tombstoning", an incident that required Lulworth coastguard rescue team, Kimmeridge coastguard, Hill Head Coastguard RT (Gosport), one of the Weymouth lifeboats, Dorset and Somerset Air ambulance and two SAR coastguard helicopters, one from Lee-on Solent and the other from St Asath in Wales. This is in addition to the local police and land ambulance service. Two casualties had to be taken to the major trauma unit in Southampton (a different county) because there was none available in Dorset. All those resources for four people in the middle of a pandemic, whose injuries were entirely down to their own behaviour. But of course I must have empathy and understanding because they have a different perspective on what is reasonable behaviour. At least this week Durdle Door didn't have any incidents like that, it was just litter and excrement they left.
Jumping off a cliff into water of unknown depth
is stupid and idiotic.
But the incident you describe happened nearly a month ago when the situation with coronavirus was very different.
And tombstoning at Durdle Door is not a new activity related to Covid:-
https://www.dorsetecho.co.uk/news/17752731.men-jumped-durdle-door-warned-tombstoning-danger/