This is the internet, I could just as easily say that I have 65 years of personal experience laying brick. I could also say that I'm trained in forensic analysis of masonry cracks to find structural deficiencies, but that's all just hearsay on a web forum and it still wouldn't necessarily make me a good resource for information.
So do you need a copy of my birth certificate to prove my age?
I never knew that this information could be passed along in the womb.
I don't know maybe somebody with a family history in the trades that the op is asking about would be a good resource of info.
I don't know how to verify my history though, would you like to see a picture of me in the 1970s as a four-year-old playing with my tonka truck in the sand pile next to the mortar mixer as my dads laborer is mixing mortar?
In your experience, do you have access to a reference that you can share from an authoritative resource, trade association, etc. that would illustrate this as shrinkage cracking?
That's not a shrinkage crack
I (quickly) posted a link I found from a home inspection association that indicates shrinkage cracks express in a different way. Are they wrong?
Drywall seams are a weak point and they never go at the corners. They are indicated above doors and windows at the mid-section. Since the cracks the OP shows are at the corners and in the middle of some windows, this would undermine the point you are trying to make with the analogy.
Not at all the week points are always in the upper and lower corners and that's exactly where the crack is in the pictures
It would probably help a lot more if the OP could post a full spread of the wall and outline (with paint) where all the cracks are. With the pictures given, we can just see that there are some cracks in the middle of one window and at the corner of another window.