My body shop paints a lot of spoilers and other things for me, but they always bake it before they give it back to me, with that I can polish it immediately.
This is a common misconception throughout the general public and even some in the painting industry... Baking.
The paints used in the refinish industry are not "bake" formulations. They are "air dry" formulations and if subjected to true baking temperatures would boil, blister and wrinkle the finish.
Factory baked finishes are special paint formulations that can withstand "baking" temperatures in the 300-400 degrees F range. These are the only finishes that are fully cured as delivered.
In the body shop refinishing world what is often mischaracterized as "baking", is actually "force-drying". Force drying is done at temperatures in the 140-145 degree F neighborhood and this is what many body shops do to speed up the initial dry time. And many shops will mischaracterize this step by generically referring to it as "baking".
The point is, don't confuse "force-drying" with "baking". They are not the same thing.
Force drying does not result in a fully cured finish - it accelerates the curing process but it alone does not complete it. That is where the 30, 60, 90 day recommendations come from as they are necessary for completing the cure process.
Baking, OTOH, completes the cure process. The paint is fully cured and hardened following the baking process.
Fresh paint may be compounded and polished, but the waxing (or other products that seal the surface) should wait.
All that said, I have never seen damage like that shown in this thread from waxing too soon. I think the more common consequence of waxing too soon is simply greatly extending the time the paint will need to reach its potential (and designed) hardness... And
maybe not ever getting there.
The example in this thread of the graphics blistering is as good of a testimonial as I have ever seen for the wait periods prior to waxing.