I just don't think we are going to agree on this one, nein. And that's ok.
Look, the truth is that almost all people who commit suicide truly believe that the world is better off without them. No one commits suicide in a day. It takes months and far more typically, years. It's what happens when someone has lost a very long, seemingly endless, internal battle. They aren't putting their relief above their loved ones' feelings. They think about those people right up until the moment they pull that trigger or knock away that chair. They truly believe that those they care about most will be better off, at least in the long run.
When I hear someone say suicide is selfish, I get it. The people affected by it are very hurt. They lost someone they loved. They are mad that someone, seemingly voluntarily, left them. They are unbelievably sad. And all of that is understandable and justifiable. It IS horribly sad.
But they are also thinking about themselves. They can't wrap their thoughts around the pain the person who did such a thing experienced. For years. Maybe even decades. The hundreds or thousands of times they thought about ending it all but didn't do it- out of hope it would get better. And then the relief didn't come.
I don't believe those that commit suicide do it voluntarily. They don't see their choice as "live or die." To use the quote in my previous post, they simply see jumping to their death as a better alternative than burning to death. And they care about their loved ones enormously but believe, truly, that those people will be better off in the long run.
For something to be selfish, it has to be knowingly self-serving. Being in such a long standing, intense pain that giving up everything you've ever loved, cared about, and worked for whilst simultaneously believing that people will better off without you does not seem very self-serving to me. It sounds like extreme desperation.