I ended up buying a touch up pen from Mazda. Despite what the parts guy stated the paint inside the pen is accessible. You just unscrew the tip off the end. Shows they do not know their products.
I was told that the paint in this pen is a combination both paint and clear coat all in one. (2 people told me that). I was told to shake it like hell before using it. Which I did.
So a couple days ago I made attempt to touch up my minor scratches by loading the paint into a special artists pen. I cleaned the area and before painting. I then cleaned the scratches with rubbing alcohol to ensure there was no contaminants. Filling the scratches was tricky for me. In the end the result was ok but not great. I do much better on stone chips
Today I was looking at the scratches and it looked like they needed a bit more paint. So I decided to give it another go. In prepping I once again cleaned the area with rubbing alcohol.
To my surprised almost all the touch up paint I had applied came right off. Why did this new paint not hold up to a simple wipe with rubbing alcohol? I am confused. So the good news is I back to where I started and can get a fresh crack at touching up scratches with hopes of doing a better job. The bad news is I am not sure I trust this paint. Is it going to hold up to waxing and washing down the road.
One other issue is that the paint is not a great match on the bumpers. I think it would be a good match on body panels but the bumpers (where the scratch is) have a slight variation in color. Buy the way.... the paint on the bumpers is super super thin.