Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is again trying to teach deep moral lessons using dubious “facts.”

On Monday, she took to Twitter to complain that “croissants at LaGuardia are going for SEVEN DOLLARS A PIECE,” yet “some people think getting a whole hour of personal, dedicated human labor for $15 is too expensive?”

After critics noted that you can get the pastry for just $3.29 at the Au Bon Pain in Terminal C, she countered that they were “making my point for me. It’s not an argument against the price of the croissant — it’s about human worth.” But if the price doesn’t matter, why mention it at all?

Then, too, the minimum wage in the city hit $15 on Jan. 1, and most La Guardia workers have a $19 minimum under rules the Port Authority adopted last September.

Anyway, AOC’s either ignoring or ignorant of the opposing argument: Your wage is no kind of measure of your “human worth”; it’s just what your employer can pay — and if she can’t afford $15, then there’s no job at all.

Case in point: Mandatory wage hikes led to reduced employment in New York City restaurants last year, despite the overall growth of the local economy.

Then, too, working a lower-wage job also gives you the chance to gain the skills to earn a higher wage. Heck, we hear you can start off as a bartender and wind up earning six figures down in Washington.

Finally: Why is the co-author of the Green New Deal even at the airport? You can get a cheaper croissant en route on an Amtrak train and emit less carbon, too.