i think he meant that modern safety technology allows for higher speeds. E.G. a f1 car crashing at 200 mph is no big deal for the driver, but previously it used to be.
Broken, but that isn't the interesting thing about the picture. That photo was taken in the very short period where wings were attached to the car in a sensible fashion: feeding the load directly into the suspension uprights. Check it out, at least that broken rear wing in that photo. Today we can only imagine cars where the wheel rate requirements for mechanical grip are independent of the loads the aerodynamics feed into the chassis.
Errr Johnny come lately here... that'll teach me to take 3 months off LFS...
The Donington museum has well over 100 GP cars from the stretching right back over almost 100 years of history. Well worth a visit if you like that sort of thing. Alternatively you could just wait for an exhibition at the NEC to borrow a few